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22 March 2024

Ethics Guidelines for Brain-Computer Interface Research


Ethics Guidelines for Brain-Computer Interface Research

1. Purpose

To guide the compliant conduct of brain-computer interface (BCI) research, prevent ethical risks in the research and application of BCI technology, and promote the healthy and orderly development of this field, this document proposes ethical guidelines for BCI research.

2. Terminology

2.1 Brain-Computer Interface (BCI):

BCI is a new interdisciplinary technology that creates an information channel between the brain and an external device to achieve direct information exchange between the two. It involves collecting the brain’s neural activities from inside or outside the skull using recording devices, decoding these activities via machine learning models to extract information like subjective intentions, and using this information to output corresponding commands to control external devices, creating an interactive closed-loop system. BCI applications mainly include healthcare and medicine, communication, and lifestyle and entertainment, especially improving the movement, communication, and perception functions of patients with neurological paralysis diseases.

2.2 Noninvasive BCI:

Refers to BCI technologies that collect brain signals in a noninvasive manner from outside the scalp, including scalp electroencephalogram (EEG) and functional near-infrared [spectroscopy] signals.

2.3 Invasive BCI:

Refers to BCI technologies that involve neurosurgical procedures to implant electrodes or other signal recording devices into specific brain areas for precisely positioned and high-throughput neural signal collection.

2.4 Interventional BCI:

Refers to BCI technologies where electrodes or other signal recording devices are introduced into specific brain regions through interventional surgery for low-damage, high-precision, and high-throughput neural signal collection inside the brain.

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