Brain-computer interface systems: a tool to support the rehabilitation of patients with motor disabilities

Authors

  • Josefina Gutiérrez-Martínez Subdirección de Investigación Tecnológica. Instituto Nacional de Rehabilitación.
  • Jessica Cantillo-Negrete Subdirección de Investigación Tecnológica. Instituto Nacional de Rehabilitación.
  • Rubén I Cariño-Escobar Departamento de Desarrollo Tecnológico. Instituto Nacional de Rehabilitación.
  • David Elías-Viñas Departamento de Ingeniería Eléctrica. Sección de Bioelectrónica. Centro de Investigación y de Estudios Avanzados del IPN.

Keywords:

Brain-computer interfaces, rehabilitation, electroencephalography, neuromotor disease

Abstract

On the last 15 years a new field of technological research has arisen in order to develop rehabili-
tation devices, they are called, brain-computer interfaces. The main goal of these systems is to

improve the quality of life of people with motor disabilities because of neuromuscular disorders

like, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, brain stroke and spinal cord injury. The brain-computer inter-
faces systems provide these users with communication capabilities, for example, operate software

to select letters in a computer or control neuroprostheses. These systems determine the user’s
intentions to move or communicate, through the processing of electrical brain signals, typically,
slow cortical potentials, visual evoked potentials, P300 potential, beta and mu rhythms, which
are recorded on the scalp, and cortical neuronal activity, recorded by implanted electrodes in the
brain. The recorded signals are translated into commands to operate in real-time a computer or
another device. A successful operation requires that the user codes commands into brain signals
and the brain computer interfaces system decodes the signals to identify these commands. This
paper presents an introduction to brain computer interfaces research, characteristics, and the
main applications to improve the quality life of people with motor disabilities.

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Published

2026-04-08

How to Cite

1.
Gutiérrez-Martínez J, Cantillo-Negrete J, Cariño-Escobar RI, Elías-Viñas D. Brain-computer interface systems: a tool to support the rehabilitation of patients with motor disabilities. Invest. Discapacidad [Internet]. 2026 Apr. 8 [cited 2026 Apr. 8];2(2):62-9. Available from: https://dsm.inr.gob.mx/indiscap/index.php/INDISCAP/article/view/930

Issue

Section

Evidence synthesis and meta-research

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