International Journal of Reconfigurable and Embedded Systems (IJRES)
Vol 10, No 3: November 2021

SoC-FPGA systems for the acquisition and processing of electroencephalographic signals

Matias Javier Oliva (Universidad Nacional de La Plata (UNLP) Instituto de investigaciones en electronica control y procesamiento de datos (LEICI) Grupo de instrumentacion biomedica industrial y cientifica (GIBIC))
Pablo Andrés García (Universidad Nacional de La Plata (UNLP) Instituto de investigaciones en electronica control y procesamiento de datos (LEICI) Grupo de instrumentacion biomedica industrial y cientifica (GIBIC))
Enrique Mario Spinelli (Universidad Nacional de La Plata (UNLP) Instituto de investigaciones en electronica control y procesamiento de datos (LEICI) Grupo de instrumentacion biomedica industrial y cientifica (GIBIC))
Alejandro Luis Veiga (Universidad Nacional de La Plata (UNLP) Instituto de investigaciones en electronica control y procesamiento de datos (LEICI) Grupo de instrumentacion biomedica industrial y cientifica (GIBIC))



Article Info

Publish Date
01 Nov 2021

Abstract

Real-time acquisition and processing of electroencephalographic signals have promising applications in the implementation of brain-computer interfaces. These devices allow the user to control a device without performing motor actions, and are usually made up of a biopotential acquisition stage and a personal computer (PC). This structure is very flexible and appropriate for research, but for final users it is necessary to migrate to an embedded system, eliminating the PC from the scheme. The strict real-time processing requirements of such systems justify the choice of a system on a chip field-programmable gate arrays (SoC-FPGA) for its implementation. This article proposes a platform for the acquisition and processing of electroencephalographic signals using this type of device, which combines the parallelism and speed capabilities of an FPGA with the simplicity of a general-purpose processor on a single chip. In this scheme, the FPGA is in charge of the real-time operation, acquiring and processing the signals, while the processor solves the high-level tasks, with the interconnection between processing elements solved by buses integrated into the chip. The proposed scheme was used to implement a brain-computer interface based on steady-state visual evoked potentials, which was used to command a speller. The first tests of the system show that a selection time of 5 seconds per command can be achieved. The time delay between the user’s selection and the system response has been estimated at 343 µs.

Copyrights © 2021






Journal Info

Abbrev

IJRES

Publisher

Subject

Economics, Econometrics & Finance

Description

The centre of gravity of the computer industry is now moving from personal computing into embedded computing with the advent of VLSI system level integration and reconfigurable core in system-on-chip (SoC). Reconfigurable and Embedded systems are increasingly becoming a key technological component ...