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Breaching Subjects' Thoughts Privacy: A Study with Visual Stimuli and Brain-Computer Interfaces

Brain-computer interfaces (BCIs) started being used in clinical scenarios, reaching nowadays new fields such as entertainment or learning. Using BCIs, neuronal activity can be monitored for various purposes, with the study of the central nervous system response to certain stimuli being one of them,...

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Autores principales: Quiles Pérez, Mario, Martínez Beltrán, Enrique Tomás, López Bernal, Sergio, Huertas Celdrán, Alberto, Martínez Pérez, Gregorio
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Hindawi 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8370826/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34413969
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2021/5517637
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author Quiles Pérez, Mario
Martínez Beltrán, Enrique Tomás
López Bernal, Sergio
Huertas Celdrán, Alberto
Martínez Pérez, Gregorio
author_facet Quiles Pérez, Mario
Martínez Beltrán, Enrique Tomás
López Bernal, Sergio
Huertas Celdrán, Alberto
Martínez Pérez, Gregorio
author_sort Quiles Pérez, Mario
collection PubMed
description Brain-computer interfaces (BCIs) started being used in clinical scenarios, reaching nowadays new fields such as entertainment or learning. Using BCIs, neuronal activity can be monitored for various purposes, with the study of the central nervous system response to certain stimuli being one of them, being the case of evoked potentials. However, due to the sensitivity of these data, the transmissions must be protected, with blockchain being an interesting approach to ensure the integrity of the data. This work focuses on the visual sense, and its relationship with the P300 evoked potential, where several open challenges related to the privacy of subjects' information and thoughts appear when using BCI. The first and most important challenge is whether it would be possible to extract sensitive information from evoked potentials. This aspect becomes even more challenging and dangerous if the stimuli are generated when the subject is not aware or conscious that they have occurred. There is an important gap in this regard in the literature, with only one work existing dealing with subliminal stimuli and BCI and having an unclear methodology and experiment setup. As a contribution of this paper, a series of experiments, five in total, have been created to study the impact of visual stimuli on the brain tangibly. These experiments have been applied to a heterogeneous group of ten subjects. The experiments show familiar visual stimuli and gradually reduce the sampling time of known images, from supraliminal to subliminal. The study showed that supraliminal visual stimuli produced P300 potentials about 50% of the time on average across all subjects. Reducing the sample time between images degraded the attack, while the impact of subliminal stimuli was not confirmed. Additionally, younger subjects generally presented a shorter response latency. This work corroborates that subjects' sensitive data can be extracted using visual stimuli and P300.
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spelling pubmed-83708262021-08-18 Breaching Subjects' Thoughts Privacy: A Study with Visual Stimuli and Brain-Computer Interfaces Quiles Pérez, Mario Martínez Beltrán, Enrique Tomás López Bernal, Sergio Huertas Celdrán, Alberto Martínez Pérez, Gregorio J Healthc Eng Research Article Brain-computer interfaces (BCIs) started being used in clinical scenarios, reaching nowadays new fields such as entertainment or learning. Using BCIs, neuronal activity can be monitored for various purposes, with the study of the central nervous system response to certain stimuli being one of them, being the case of evoked potentials. However, due to the sensitivity of these data, the transmissions must be protected, with blockchain being an interesting approach to ensure the integrity of the data. This work focuses on the visual sense, and its relationship with the P300 evoked potential, where several open challenges related to the privacy of subjects' information and thoughts appear when using BCI. The first and most important challenge is whether it would be possible to extract sensitive information from evoked potentials. This aspect becomes even more challenging and dangerous if the stimuli are generated when the subject is not aware or conscious that they have occurred. There is an important gap in this regard in the literature, with only one work existing dealing with subliminal stimuli and BCI and having an unclear methodology and experiment setup. As a contribution of this paper, a series of experiments, five in total, have been created to study the impact of visual stimuli on the brain tangibly. These experiments have been applied to a heterogeneous group of ten subjects. The experiments show familiar visual stimuli and gradually reduce the sampling time of known images, from supraliminal to subliminal. The study showed that supraliminal visual stimuli produced P300 potentials about 50% of the time on average across all subjects. Reducing the sample time between images degraded the attack, while the impact of subliminal stimuli was not confirmed. Additionally, younger subjects generally presented a shorter response latency. This work corroborates that subjects' sensitive data can be extracted using visual stimuli and P300. Hindawi 2021-08-09 /pmc/articles/PMC8370826/ /pubmed/34413969 http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2021/5517637 Text en Copyright © 2021 Mario Quiles Pérez et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Quiles Pérez, Mario
Martínez Beltrán, Enrique Tomás
López Bernal, Sergio
Huertas Celdrán, Alberto
Martínez Pérez, Gregorio
Breaching Subjects' Thoughts Privacy: A Study with Visual Stimuli and Brain-Computer Interfaces
title Breaching Subjects' Thoughts Privacy: A Study with Visual Stimuli and Brain-Computer Interfaces
title_full Breaching Subjects' Thoughts Privacy: A Study with Visual Stimuli and Brain-Computer Interfaces
title_fullStr Breaching Subjects' Thoughts Privacy: A Study with Visual Stimuli and Brain-Computer Interfaces
title_full_unstemmed Breaching Subjects' Thoughts Privacy: A Study with Visual Stimuli and Brain-Computer Interfaces
title_short Breaching Subjects' Thoughts Privacy: A Study with Visual Stimuli and Brain-Computer Interfaces
title_sort breaching subjects' thoughts privacy: a study with visual stimuli and brain-computer interfaces
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8370826/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34413969
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2021/5517637
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