The phenomena of brain-computer interfaceinefficiency in transfer rates and reliability can hinder development and use of brain-computer interface technology. This study aimed to enhance the classification performance of motor imagery-based brain-computer interface (three-class: left hand, right hand, and right foot) of poor performers using a hybrid-imagery approach that combined motor and somatosensory activity. Twenty healthy subjects participated in these experiments involving the following three paradigms: (1) Control-condition: motor imagery only, (2) Hybrid-condition I: combined motor and somatosensory stimuli (same stimulus: rough ball), and (3) Hybridcondition II: combined motor and somatosensory stimuli (different stimulus: hard and rough, soft and smooth, and hard and rough ball). The three paradigms for all participants, achieved an average accuracy of 63.60±21.62%, 71.25±19.53%, and 84.09±12.79% using the filter bank common spatial pattern algorithm (5-fold cross-validation), respectively. In the poor performance group, the Hybridcondition II paradigm achieved an accuracy of 81.82%, showing a significant increase of 38.86% and 21.04% in accuracy compared to the control-condition (42.96%) and Hybrid-condition I (60.78%), respectively. Conversely, the good performance group showed a pattern of increasing accuracy, with no significant difference between the three