Earable Platform with Integrated Simultaneous EEG Sensing and Auditory Stimulation
Min Suk Lee, Abhinav Uppal, Ananya Thota, Chetan Pathrabe, Rommani Mondal + 3 more
TLDR
A new custom-molded in-ear EEG platform simultaneously senses brain activity and delivers auditory stimulation for comfortable, discreet neuromonitoring.
Key contributions
- Developed a custom-molded in-ear EEG monitor (IEEM) for simultaneous brain sensing and audio delivery.
- Earpiece design provides precise anatomical fit and effective sound isolation.
- Validated detection of EOG, eye blinks, jaw clenches, ASSR, and alpha modulation.
- Confirmed stable electrode-skin contact with impedance similar to traditional dry electrodes.
Why it matters
This work addresses the limitations of cumbersome scalp-based EEG by offering a comfortable, discreet in-ear solution. It enables real-time brain activity monitoring and adaptive acoustic stimulation, paving the way for advanced closed-loop neuromodulation applications.
Original Abstract
Conventional scalp-based EEG systems are cumbersome to use, requiring extensive setup, restrictive wiring, and conductive gels that can dry out and limit long-term monitoring, while also carrying social stigma. As a result, there is increasing interest in in-ear EEG technology to improve comfort, convenience, and discretion for users. This work presents a personalized in-ear EEG monitor (IEEM) that simultaneously captures EEG signals from the outer ear while delivering audio playback through the same device. The earpiece is custom-molded to precisely match the user's ear anatomy, providing effective sound isolation from the environment and enabling direct audio transmission into the ear canal. Testing of the assembled earpiece shows successful detection of electrooculography (EOG), eye blinks, jaw clenches, auditory steady-state responses (ASSR), and alpha modulation. Electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS) measurements confirm stable electrode-skin contact, with impedance values similar to those of traditional dry electrodes. The integrated approach enables potential closed-loop neuromodulation applications all in the ear where brain activity can be monitored in real-time and corresponding acoustic stimulation delivered adaptively.
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