Notas: | 1. Human brain function and brain-computer interfaces<br>2. Brain-computer interfaces: definitions and principles<br>3. Stroke and potential benefits of brain to computer interface<br>4. Brain-computer interfaces for people with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis<br>5. Brain damage by trauma<br>6. Spinal cord lesions<br>7. Brain:computer interfaces for communication<br>8. Applications of brain-computer interfaces to the control of robotic and prosthetic arms<br>9. BCI for rehab ('not control') <br>10. Video games as rich environments to foster brain plasticity<br>11. Consciousness and communication brain-computer interfaces in severely brain-injured patients <br>12. Smart neuromodulation in movement disorders<br>13. Bidirectional brain computer interfaces<br>14. Brain-computer interfaces and virtual reality for neurorehabilitation<br>15. Monitoring performance of professional and occupational operators<br>16. Self-Health Monitoring and wearable neurotechnologies<br>17. Brain-computer interfaces for basic neuroscience<br>18. Electroencephalography<br>19. iEEG: dura-lining electrodes<br>20. Local field potentials for BCI control<br>21. Real-time fMRI for brain-computer interfacing<br>22. Merging brain-computer interface and functional electrical stimulation technologies for movement restoration<br>23. General principles of machine learning for brain-computer interfacing<br>24. Ethics and the emergence of brain-computer interface medicine<br>25. Industrial perspectives on brain-computer interface technology<br>26. Hearing the needs of clinical users |