•  78
    Neurofeedback Training of Alpha Relative Power Improves the Performance of Motor Imagery Brain-Computer Interface
    with Qing Zhou, Ruidong Cheng, Xiangming Ye, and Kedi Xu
    Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 16. 2022.
    Significant variation in performance in motor imagery tasks impedes their wide adoption for brain-computer interface applications. Previous researchers have found that resting-state alpha-band power is positively correlated with MI-BCI performance. In this study, we designed a neurofeedback training protocol based on the up-regulation of the alpha band relative power to investigate its effect on MI-BCI performance. The principal finding of this study is that alpha NFT could successfully help sub…Read more
  •  70
    Relative Power Correlates With the Decoding Performance of Motor Imagery Both Across Time and Subjects
    with Qing Zhou, Jiafan Lin, Yueming Wang, Yan Han, and Kedi Xu
    Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 15. 2021.
    One of the most significant challenges in the application of brain-computer interfaces is the large performance variation, which often occurs over time or across users. Recent evidence suggests that the physiological states may explain this performance variation in BCI, however, the underlying neurophysiological mechanism is unclear. In this study, we conducted a seven-session motor-imagery experiment on 20 healthy subjects to investigate the neurophysiological mechanism on the performance varia…Read more
  •  31
    Enhanced Motor Imagery-Based BCI Performance via Tactile Stimulation on Unilateral Hand
    with Xiaokang Shu, Xinjun Sheng, Dingguo Zhang, and Xiangyang Zhu
    Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 11. 2017.
  •  21
    Not Only Top-Down: The Dual-Processing of Gender-Emotion Stereotypes
    with Wen-Long Zhu, Ping Fang, Hui-lin Xing, and Yan Ma
    Frontiers in Psychology 11. 2020.
    Is gender-emotion stereotype a “one-hundred percent” top-down processing phenomenon, or are there additional contributions to cognitive processing from background clues when they are related to stereotypes? In the present study, we measured the gender-emotion stereotypes of 57 undergraduates with a face recall task and found that, regardless of whether the emotional expressions of distractors were congruent or incongruent with targets, people tended to misperceive the fearful faces of men as ang…Read more