@proceedings {2241, title = {Detection of spontaneous class-specific visual stimuli with high temporal accuracy in human electrocorticography.}, volume = {2009}, year = {2009}, month = {2009}, pages = {6465-8}, abstract = {Most brain-computer interface classification experiments from electrical potential recordings have been focused on the identification of classes of stimuli or behavior where the timing of experimental parameters is known or pre-designated. Real world experience, however, is spontaneous, and to this end we describe an experiment predicting the occurrence, timing, and types of visual stimuli perceived by a human subject from electrocorticographic recordings. All 300 of 300 presented stimuli were correctly detected, with a temporal precision of order 20 ms. The type of stimulus (face/house) was correctly identified in 95\% of these cases. There were approximately 20 false alarm events, corresponding to a late 2nd neuronal response to a previously identified event.}, keywords = {Algorithms, Electrocardiography, Evoked Potentials, Visual, Humans, Male, Pattern Recognition, Automated, Pattern Recognition, Visual, Photic Stimulation, Reproducibility of Results, Sensitivity and Specificity, User-Computer Interface, Visual Cortex}, issn = {1557-170X}, doi = {10.1109/IEMBS.2009.5333546}, author = {Miller, John W and Hermes, Dora and Gerwin Schalk and Ramsey, Nick F and Jagadeesh, Bharathi and den Nijs, Marcel and Ojemann, J G and Rao, Rajesh P N} }