Title
Discrimination of Electroencephalograms on Recognizing and Recalling Playing Cards A Magic Without Trick
Abstract
Authors measured electroencephalograms (EEGs) as participants recognized and recalled 13 playing card images (from ace to king of club) presented on a CRT monitor. During the experiment, electrodes were fixed on the scalps of the participants. Four EEG channels located over the right frontal and temporal cortices (Fp(2), F-4, C-4 and F-8 according to the international 10-20 system) were used in the discrimination. Sampling data were taken at latencies between 400 and 900 ms at 25 ms intervals for each trial. Thus, data were 84 dimensional vectors (21 time point X 4 channels). The number of objective variables was 13 (the number of different cards), and the number of explanatory variates was thus 84. Canonical discriminant analysis was applied to these single trial EEGs. Results of the canonical discriminant analysis were obtained using the jack knife method and were 100% of nine participants. We could perform playing card estimation magic without a trick. This fact is sub production based on our series of precedent research.
Year
DOI
Venue
2016
10.1007/978-3-319-75408-6_19
Studies in Fuzziness and Soft Computing
DocType
Volume
ISSN
Conference
361
1434-9922
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
0
0.34
0
Authors
6
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
T. Yamanoi12611.23
Hisashi Toyoshima2144.38
Hiroshi Takayanagi300.34
Toshimasa Yamazaki401.01
Shin-ichi Ohnishi500.34
Michio Sugeno6799168.91