Core Insights - Dr. Peng Junren from Dineike's Brain-Computer Interface (BCI) division published a paper in the "Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences" discussing a new approach to shared autonomy between human electroencephalography and TD3 deep reinforcement learning [1] - The study indicates that approximately 15%-30% of users are unable to effectively operate traditional BCI systems due to physiological differences, highlighting a gap in current technology that only measures internal brain activity without considering environmental factors [1] - Dineike's BCI division proposes an active BCI co-control scheme based on deep reinforcement learning, aiming to provide a new paradigm for the universal application of BCIs through collaborative decision-making between humans and AI agents [1] - The next steps for Dineike involve focusing on breakthroughs in core technologies related to brainwave interaction and the industrialization of these technologies, moving from laboratory research to practical applications [1]
狄耐克:脑机交互事业部提出基于深度强化学习的主动式脑机接口共同控制方案