EEG-based usability assessment of 3D shutter glasses

Markus A. Wenzel, Rafael Schultze-Kraft, Frank C. Meinecke, Fabien Cardinaux, Thomas Kemp, Klaus Robert Müller, Gabriel Curio, Benjamin Blankertz

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    12 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Objective. Neurotechnology can contribute to the usability assessment of products by providing objective measures of neural workload and can uncover usability impediments that are not consciously perceived by test persons. In this study, the neural processing effort imposed on the viewer of 3D television by shutter glasses was quantified as a function of shutter frequency. In particular, we sought to determine the critical shutter frequency at which the 'neural flicker' vanishes, such that visual fatigue due to this additional neural effort can be prevented by increasing the frequency of the system. Approach. Twenty-three participants viewed an image through 3D shutter glasses, while multichannel electroencephalogram (EEG) was recorded. In total ten shutter frequencies were employed, selected individually for each participant to cover the range below, at and above the threshold of flicker perception. The source of the neural flicker correlate was extracted using independent component analysis and the flicker impact on the visual cortex was quantified by decoding the state of the shutter from the EEG. Main Result. Effects of the shutter glasses were traced in the EEG up to around 67 Hz - about 20 Hz over the flicker perception threshold - and vanished at the subsequent frequency level of 77 Hz. Significance. The impact of the shutter glasses on the visual cortex can be detected by neurotechnology even when a flicker is not reported by the participants. Potential impact. Increasing the shutter frequency from the usual 50 Hz or 60 Hz to 77 Hz reduces the risk of visual fatigue and thus improves shutter-glass-based 3D usability.

    Original languageEnglish
    Article number016003
    JournalJournal of Neural Engineering
    Volume13
    Issue number1
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2015 Dec 8

    Keywords

    • 3D shutter glasses
    • EEG
    • flicker
    • independent component analysis
    • machine learning
    • neurotechnology
    • single-trial classification

    ASJC Scopus subject areas

    • Biomedical Engineering
    • Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience

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