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Decoding Neural Activity from an Intracortical Implant in Humans with Tetraplegia Chad E. Bouton Battelle Health and Life Sciences Division. Background. Cyberkinetics (founded in 2001) developed a Brain-Computer Interface (BCI) system called BrainGate
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Decoding Neural Activity from an Intracortical Implant in Humans with TetraplegiaChad E. BoutonBattelleHealth and Life Sciences Division
Background • Cyberkinetics (founded in 2001) developed a Brain-Computer Interface (BCI) system called BrainGate • At the core of the system was the Utah Electrode Array (brain implant) • Implanted in the Primary Motor Cortex (M1), hand/arm area • Purpose was to allow severely disabled individuals to communicate, use their PC’s, and even control a wheelchair by decoding their thoughts
Background • Battelle developed user training methods and NeuralDecoding Algorithms • Processed signals from the electrode array (96 channels) • Goal: isolate and predict arm/hand movements the patient is thinking about Time Domain Signals from Electrode Array Neural Decoding Shoulder Abduction Elbow Extension Wrist Flexion
Patients • 54 year old female stroke victim (“SCI 3”), quadriplegic and unable to speak • 36 year old male, diagnosed with ALS, quadriplegic and unable to speak • Conducted an intended motion survey to look at neural modulation (change in neuronal firing patterns) for various visually cued movements • Shoulder Flexion and Extension • Shoulder Abduction and Adduction • Elbow Flexion and Extension • Wrist Flexion and Hyperextension • Wrist Radial and Ulnar Deviation • Wrist Pronation and Supination • Hand Open and Close
Initial Motion Survey with SCI3 Flexion/extension mixed (dark/med blue) Zero Units (Neurons) Exhibited Differing Firing Patterns (Axes are unit-less and represent the first three principal components from a principal components / eigenvector analysis.)
Thought-Driven Cursor • Previous decoding methods (from non-human primate work) • Position based (assumed neural patterns correlated to position in space) • Early demonstration in a human subject: BG SCI P003 - Center Out - 2006.01.23.wmv • Marginally stable results - proprioceptive feedback is disrupted in a disabled user • Introduced user training methods - used motion demonstration (mirror neuron activation) and ‘coaching’ periods • Moved away from position-based decoding and utilized model-based approaches along with support vector machine methods • Results for Battelle decoding algorithm - stabilized cursor motion by isolating 6 intended motions: rest, four wrist motions, and close hand: • SCI P003 8-23-06 Great - excellent motion and diagonal.mov
Increasing Degrees-of-Freedom -12 Motions (6 DOF) Recognized by Algorithm
Adaptive Algorithm • Subject ALS1 exhibited decreased and inconsistent performance • Incorporated performance feedback during training (“dots/masses on springs”) • Adapted decoding algorithm after each training block • Demonstration: ALS1_4DOF_matlab_screen.wmv
Communicating to Others • Locked-in syndrome • 5 imagined movements to move and ‘click’ cursor over virtual keyboard: Aug_Communications_Wonderful_high_quality.wmv
Wheelchair Control • Mobility extremely important and can be difficult/impossible for certain patients with existing interfaces • As aired on 60 Minutes (Nov. 2, 2008), Cathy Hutchinson became the world’s first person to control a wheelchair with a brain implant (using the Battelle training and decoding methods) • Stroke Patient - Controlling Wheelchair.wmv
Acknowledgements • Cyberkinetics, Inc. • Dr. John Donoghue • Dr. Leigh Hochberg • Mike Fritz • Almut Branner • Abe Caplan • Ammar Shaikhouni • Oystein Johnsen (Eagle)