German - Japanese Workshop on Adaptive BCIs@Kyoto 2015, 28-29 Oct. See http://ishiilab.jp/bci/ for detail. Dear colleagues, Upon several requests, we extended the due date for poster presentation for the upcoming Workshop on Adaptive Brain Computer Interfaces. Important dates: Submittion of poster abstract: 1st October, 2015. (EXTENDED) Registration for participants: 1st October, 2015. Workshop: 28th--29th October, 2015. Contact information: Web: http://ishiilab.jp/bci/ E-mail: adaptive-bci-2015[at]googlegroups.com Best Wishes, Klaus-Robert Müller and Shigeyuki Oba ----- Dear Colleagues, We are pleased to announce the upcoming Workshop on Adaptive BCIs. Since the advent of the technology, Brain-Computer Interfacing (BCI) aims to reliably translate recorded brain signals, e.g., EEG, into control commands for a computer. Although there have been great improvements over the last decades, current BCIs are still scarcely used outside laboratories. One major limitation preventing the prevalence of this promising technology into everyday life of, e.g., patients, is the lack of robustness and reliability. Adaptive BCIs compensate for changes encountered in real-world environments and are robust against nonstationarity (i) induced by external causes such as a change in the experimental environment or artifactual noise sources and (ii) internal causes, namely fluctuations of brain states e.g. slow ones due to fatigue or brisk ones caused by distraction of the subject. Co-adaptivity is an important ingredient of such systems, since in a ever-changing environment, it is not only the machine that needs to adapt to changes in signal statistics, it is also the user who has to adapt his strategies in order to cope with fluctuations in background noise and sensory input. This workshop presents recent developments in the field and aims at providing tools for neuroscientists and practitioners that enable them to go beyond restricted laboratory paradigms and study the brain while the subject is interacting with his/her natural environment. The workshop consists of 13 invited talks and a poster session. The poster session will allow participants to interact and present their own ideas and findings on from theoretical to practical aspects of BCI studies. Confirmed speakers: A. Cichocki (Riken, Japan) S. Fazli (Korea University, Korea) M. Kawanabe (ATR, Japan) P-J. Kindermans (TU Berlin, Germany) K-R. Müller (TU Berlin, Germany) S. Nishimoto (Osaka University, Japan) W. Samek (Fraunhofer HHI, Germany) M. Sugiyama (Univ. of Tokyo, Japan) J. Hirayama (ATR, Japan) R. Fukuma (Osaka University, Japan) J. Fujiki (Fukuoka University, Japan) S. Oba (Kyoto University, Japan) M. Cuturi (Kyoto University, Japan) We are also calling for poster presentations. The title and abstract will be published via Frontiers publishing system. Participation fee is not required. Important dates: Submittion of poster abstract: 1st October, 2015. Registration for participants: 1st October, 2015. Workshop: 28th--29th October, 2015. 2015-09-01 12:47 GMT+09:00 Shigeyuki Oba <oba@i.kyoto-u.ac.jp>:
German - Japanese Workshop on Adaptive BCIs@Kyoto 2015, 28-29 Oct. See http://ishiilab.jp/bci/ for detail.
Dear Colleagues,
We are pleased to announce the upcoming Workshop on Adaptive BCIs.
Since the advent of the technology, Brain-Computer Interfacing (BCI) aims to reliably translate recorded brain signals, e.g., EEG, into control commands for a computer. Although there have been great improvements over the last decades, current BCIs are still scarcely used outside laboratories. One major limitation preventing the prevalence of this promising technology into everyday life of, e.g., patients, is the lack of robustness and reliability. Adaptive BCIs compensate for changes encountered in real-world environments and are robust against nonstationarity (i) induced by external causes such as a change in the experimental environment or artifactual noise sources and (ii) internal causes, namely fluctuations of brain states e.g. slow ones due to fatigue or brisk ones caused by distraction of the subject. Co-adaptivity is an important ingredient of such systems, since in a ever-changing environment, it is not only the machine that needs to adapt to changes in signal statistics, it is also the user who has to adapt his strategies in order to cope with fluctuations in background noise and sensory input. This workshop presents recent developments in the field and aims at providing tools for neuroscientists and practitioners that enable them to go beyond restricted laboratory paradigms and study the brain while the subject is interacting with his/her natural environment. The workshop consists of 13 invited talks and a poster session. The poster session will allow participants to interact and present their own ideas and findings on from theoretical to practical aspects of BCI studies.
Confirmed speakers: A. Cichocki (Riken, Japan) S. Fazli (Korea University, Korea) M. Kawanabe (ATR, Japan) P-J. Kindermans (TU Berlin, Germany) K-R. Müller (TU Berlin, Germany) S. Nishimoto (Osaka University, Japan) W. Samek (Fraunhofer HHI, Germany) M. Sugiyama (Univ. of Tokyo, Japan) J. Hirayama (ATR, Japan) R. Fukuma (Osaka University, Japan) J. Fujiki (Fukuoka University, Japan) S. Oba (Kyoto University, Japan) M. Cuturi (Kyoto University, Japan)
We are also calling for poster presentations. The title and abstract will be published via Frontiers publishing system.
Participation fee is not required.
Important dates: Submittion of poster abstract: 15th September, 2015. Registration for participants: 1st October, 2015.
Contact information: Web: http://ishiilab.jp/bci/ E-mail: adaptive-bci-2015[at]googlegroups.com Best Wishes,
Klaus-Robert Müller and Shigeyuki Oba
-- ----- Shigeyuki Oba Graduate School of Informatics, Kyoto University oba@i.kyoto-u.ac.jp http://ishiilab.jp/member/oba
-- ----- Shigeyuki Oba Graduate School of Informatics, Kyoto University oba@i.kyoto-u.ac.jp http://ishiilab.jp/member/oba