Don't put words in my mouth: speech perception can falsely activate a brain-computer interface

Publication date

2025-08-19

Authors

Schippers, AnouckORCID 0000-0001-8245-1857
Vansteensel, Mariska JORCID 0000-0002-9252-5116ISNI 0000000392447362
Freudenburg, Zachary VORCID 0000-0002-2790-0020
Luo, Shiyu
Crone, Nathan E
Ramsey, NickORCID 0000-0002-7136-259XISNI 0000000399572879

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Document Type

Article

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cc_by

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Recent studies have demonstrated that speech can be decoded from brain activity which in turn can be used for brain-computer interface (BCI)-based communication. It is however also known that the area often used as a signal source for speech decoding BCIs, the sensorimotor cortex (SMC), is also engaged when people perceive speech, thus making speech perception a potential source of false positive activation of the BCI. The current study investigated if and how speech perception may interfere with reliable speech BCI control. METHODS: We recorded high-density electrocorticography (HD-ECoG) data from five subjects while they performed a speech perception and a speech production task. We first evaluated whether speech perception and production activated the SMC. Second, we trained a support-vector machine (SVM) on the speech production data (including rest). To test the occurrence of false positives, this decoder was then tested on speech perception data where every perception segment that was classified as a produced syllable rather than rest was considered a false positive. Finally, we investigated whether perceived speech could be distinguished from produced speech and rest. RESULTS: Our results show that both the perception and production of speech activate the SMC. In addition, we found that decoders that are highly reliable at detecting self-produced syllables from brain signals may generate false positive BCI activations during the perception of speech and that it is possible to distinguish perceived speech from produced speech and rest, with high accuracy. CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that speech perception can interfere with reliable BCI control, and that efforts to limit the occurrence of false positives during daily-life BCI use should be implemented in BCI design to increase the likelihood of successful adoptation by end users.

Keywords

Adult, Brain-Computer Interfaces, Electrocorticography, Female, Humans, Male, Sensorimotor Cortex/physiology, Speech Perception/physiology, Speech/physiology, Support Vector Machine, Journal Article

Citation

Schippers, A, Vansteensel, M J, Freudenburg, Z V, Luo, S, Crone, N E & Ramsey, N F 2025, 'Don't put words in my mouth : speech perception can falsely activate a brain-computer interface', Journal of neuroengineering and rehabilitation, vol. 22, no. 1, 181. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12984-025-01689-7