Direct Communication Between Brains: A Systematic PRISMA Review of Brain-To-Brain Interface.

dc.contributor.author

Nam, Chang S

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Traylor, Zachary

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Chen, Mengyue

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Jiang, Xiaoning

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Feng, Wuwei

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Chhatbar, Pratik Yashvant

dc.date.accessioned

2021-06-06T22:19:19Z

dc.date.available

2021-06-06T22:19:19Z

dc.date.issued

2021-01

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2021-06-06T22:19:07Z

dc.description.abstract

This paper aims to review the current state of brain-to-brain interface (B2BI) technology and its potential. B2BIs function via a brain-computer interface (BCI) to read a sender's brain activity and a computer-brain interface (CBI) to write a pattern to a receiving brain, transmitting information. We used the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) to systematically review current literature related to B2BI, resulting in 15 relevant publications. Experimental papers primarily used transcranial magnetic stimulation (tMS) for the CBI portion of their B2BI. Most targeted the visual cortex to produce phosphenes. In terms of study design, 73.3% (11) are unidirectional and 86.7% (13) use only a 1:1 collaboration model (subject to subject). Limitations are apparent, as the CBI method varied greatly between studies indicating no agreed upon neurostimulatory method for transmitting information. Furthermore, only 12.4% (2) studies are more complicated than a 1:1 model and few researchers studied direct bidirectional B2BI. These studies show B2BI can offer advances in human communication and collaboration, but more design and experiments are needed to prove potential. B2BIs may allow rehabilitation therapists to pass information mentally, activating a patient's brain to aid in stroke recovery and adding more complex bidirectionality may allow for increased behavioral synchronization between users. The field is very young, but applications of B2BI technology to neuroergonomics and human factors engineering clearly warrant more research.

dc.identifier.issn

1662-5218

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1662-5218

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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/23365

dc.language

eng

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Frontiers Media SA

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Frontiers in neurorobotics

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10.3389/fnbot.2021.656943

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brain communication

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brain-computer interface

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brain-to-brain interface

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computer-brain interface

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neuroergonomics

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Direct Communication Between Brains: A Systematic PRISMA Review of Brain-To-Brain Interface.

dc.type

Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

Feng, Wuwei|0000-0001-6230-4905

duke.contributor.orcid

Chhatbar, Pratik Yashvant|0000-0001-6436-8427

pubs.begin-page

656943

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School of Medicine

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Neurology, Stroke and Vascular Neurology

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Duke

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Neurology

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Clinical Science Departments

pubs.publication-status

Published

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15

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