G
Gert Pfurtscheller
Researcher at Graz University of Technology
Publications - 510
Citations - 68013
Gert Pfurtscheller is an academic researcher from Graz University of Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Electroencephalography & Brain–computer interface. The author has an hindex of 117, co-authored 507 publications receiving 62873 citations. Previous affiliations of Gert Pfurtscheller include University of Graz.
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Human Movement-Related Potentials vs Desynchronization of EEG Alpha Rhythm: A High-Resolution EEG Study
Claudio Babiloni,Filippo Carducci,Febo Cincotti,Paolo Maria Rossini,Christa Neuper,Gert Pfurtscheller,Fabio Babiloni +6 more
TL;DR: The results may suggest that alpha ERD reflects changes in the background oscillatory activity in wide cortical sensorimotor areas, whereas MRPs represent mainly increased, task-specific responses of SMA and contralateral M1-S1.
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Event-related synchronization of mu rhythm in the EEG over the cortical hand area in man
TL;DR: It is speculated, that this ERS represents a short lasting 'idling state' of hand area neurons when other body parts are moved and is circumscribed and found at electrodes overlying both cortical hand areas.
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Information transfer rate in a five-classes brain-computer interface
TL;DR: This work proposes a method that combines the EEG patterns based on separability into subsets of two, three, four, and five mental tasks, and reveals that the upper limit of different mental tasks for a BCI system is three.
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Clinical application of an EEG-based brain–computer interface: a case study in a patient with severe motor impairment
Christa Neuper,Gernot Müller,Andrea Kübler,Niels Birbaumer,Niels Birbaumer,Gert Pfurtscheller +5 more
TL;DR: The proposed BCI training procedure, based on electroencephalogram (EEG) biofeedback and concomitant adaptation of feature extraction and classification, may improve actual levels of communication ability in locked-in patients.
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An asynchronously controlled EEG-based virtual keyboard: improvement of the spelling rate
TL;DR: Of the first results of three able-bodied subjects operating the VK, two were successful, showing an improvement of the spelling rate and the number of correctly spelled letters/min.