The tongue is an aesthetically useful organ located in the oral cavity. It can move in complex ways with very little fatigue. Many studies on assistive technologies operated by tongue are called tongue-human computer interface or tongue-machine interface (TMI) for paralyzed individuals. However, many of them are obtrusive systems consisting of hardware such as sensors and magnetic tracer placed in the mouth and on the tongue. Hence these approaches could be annoying, aesthetically unappealing and unhygienic. In this study, we aimed to develop a natural and reliable tongue-machine interface using solely glossokinetic potentials via investigation of the success of machine learning algorithms for 1-D tongue-based control or communication on as...
Wheelchair control methods for people with tetraplegia and other disabilities that prevent them from...
A new communication and control concept using tongue movements is introduced to generate, detect, an...
Purpose: Individuals with tetraplegia depend on alternative interfaces in order to control computers...
This study may serve disabled people to control assistive devices in natural, unobtrusive, speedy an...
The tongue is one of the few organs with high mobility in the case of severe spinal cord injuries. H...
Glossokinetic potentials (GKPs) are electric potential responses generated by tongue movement. In th...
The research described herein was undertaken to develop and test a novel tongue interface based on c...
Tongue-computer interfaces allow people with upper limb disability to control a computer with their ...
Tongue-computer interfaces have shown the potential to control assistive devices developed for indiv...
This paper presents a cost effective design of a wearable wireless tongue drive system (TDS) for dis...
There has been dramatic increase in the number of people with physical disabilities in recent years....
The tongue can substitute human sensory systems and has been used as a medium of input to help impai...
This paper presents the design of an assistive technology that allows people with disabilities to co...
The "Tongue Drive" system is a tongue-operated assistive innovation produced for individuals with ex...
www.smi.hst.aau.dk/~naja/ This work describes a new inductive tongue-computer interface to be used b...
Wheelchair control methods for people with tetraplegia and other disabilities that prevent them from...
A new communication and control concept using tongue movements is introduced to generate, detect, an...
Purpose: Individuals with tetraplegia depend on alternative interfaces in order to control computers...
This study may serve disabled people to control assistive devices in natural, unobtrusive, speedy an...
The tongue is one of the few organs with high mobility in the case of severe spinal cord injuries. H...
Glossokinetic potentials (GKPs) are electric potential responses generated by tongue movement. In th...
The research described herein was undertaken to develop and test a novel tongue interface based on c...
Tongue-computer interfaces allow people with upper limb disability to control a computer with their ...
Tongue-computer interfaces have shown the potential to control assistive devices developed for indiv...
This paper presents a cost effective design of a wearable wireless tongue drive system (TDS) for dis...
There has been dramatic increase in the number of people with physical disabilities in recent years....
The tongue can substitute human sensory systems and has been used as a medium of input to help impai...
This paper presents the design of an assistive technology that allows people with disabilities to co...
The "Tongue Drive" system is a tongue-operated assistive innovation produced for individuals with ex...
www.smi.hst.aau.dk/~naja/ This work describes a new inductive tongue-computer interface to be used b...
Wheelchair control methods for people with tetraplegia and other disabilities that prevent them from...
A new communication and control concept using tongue movements is introduced to generate, detect, an...
Purpose: Individuals with tetraplegia depend on alternative interfaces in order to control computers...