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The Annual BCI Research Awards are international prizes that
recognize the top new projects in brain-computer interface (BCI)
research. This book contains summaries of the key projects from the
2018 BCI Research Award. Each article is authored by the group of
researchers who developed the project, and articles have been
updated with new progress achieved since 2018. They are
complemented by an introduction by the editors together with a
chapter of highlights and interviews with the 2018 award winners.
One of the prominent trends in recent years has been the
development of BCIs for new patient groups; many chapters in this
book present emerging and novel research directions likely to
become more prevalent in the near future.
According to Albert Goldbarth, Author, To Be Read in 500 Years and
many more poetry collections; two-time winner, National Book
Critics Circle award, "The 'slim striped dirt-colored frog / in the
first flush of deadnetle, milweed / and bindweed unmaking the
hollyhock bed" might be Annie Dillard by way of Gerard Manley
Hopins . . . but in fact it's Suzanne Kay Miller, whose
poem-document on life lived both in and away from a Mennonite
community proves to us over and over how 'You might imagine
eternity / in local terms, ' the mandate of so much moving poetry,
and the lovely presiding spirit of her own." Darcy A. Zabel,
Professor of English, Friends University, says that "Pop
psychologists call it baggage-the memories, the feelings, both
happy and sad, that stick with us, and haunt us, but author Suzanne
Miller rightly observes that really, it's storage issues-how much
room do you have in a life for happiness, for joy, for love and for
the pain that sometimes comes with great love and loss?" Raylene
Hinz-Penner, Author, Searching for Sacred Ground: The Journey of
Chief Lawrence Hart, Mennonite, observes, "'To live as an island in
a sea of wickeness, even with God, leaves one dry.' Empathizing
here with the thirst of Noah, Miller explores that 'dryness' that
is the human plight, especially the generations of woman-pain:
mothering, a husband's betrayals, brokenness, like that of the
trees. The poet's voice reminds me, when it breaks into praise, of
Hopkins in its formality-and sometimes, in its disappointment with
the world, as anguished as a Sexton or a Plath."
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