Motor somatotopy impacts imagery strategy success in human intracortical brain-computer interfaces.

N G Kunigk, H R Schone, C Gontier, W Hockeimer, A F Tortolani, N G Hatsopoulos, J E Downey, S M Chase, M L Boninger, B D Dekleva, J L Collinger
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Abstract

Objective:The notion of a somatotopically organized motor cortex, with movements of different body parts being controlled by spatially distinct areas of cortex, is well known. However, recent studies have challenged this notion and suggested a more distributed representation of movement control. This shift in perspective has significant implications, particularly when considering the implantation location of electrode arrays for intracortical brain-computer interfaces (iBCIs). We sought to evaluate whether the location of neural recordings from the precentral gyrus, and thus the underlying somatotopy, has any impact on the imagery strategies that can enable successful iBCI control.Approach:Three individuals with a spinal cord injury were enrolled in an ongoing clinical trial of an iBCI. Participants had two intracortical microelectrode arrays implanted in the arm and/or hand areas of the precentral gyrus based on presurgical functional imaging. Neural data were recorded while participants attempted to perform movements of the hand, wrist, elbow, and shoulder.Main results:We found that electrode arrays that were located more medially recorded significantly more activity during attempted proximal arm movements (elbow, shoulder) than did lateral arrays, which captured more activity related to attempted distal arm movements (hand, wrist). We also evaluated the relative contribution from the two arrays implanted in each participant to decoding accuracy during calibration of an iBCI decoder for translation and grasping tasks. For both task types, imagery strategy (e.g. reaching vs wrist movements) had a significant impact on the relative contributions of each array to decoding. Overall, we found some evidence of broad tuning to arm and hand movements; however, there was a clear bias in the amount of information accessible about each movement type in spatially distinct areas of cortex.Significance:These results demonstrate that classical concepts of somatotopy can have real consequences for iBCI use, and highlight the importance of considering somatotopy when planning iBCI implantation.

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运动躯体切除术影响人脑皮层内脑机接口成像策略的成功。
人体组织运动皮层的概念是众所周知的,不同身体部位的运动由空间上不同的皮层区域控制。然而,最近的研究挑战了这一概念,并提出了一种更分布式的运动控制表征。这种观点的转变具有重要意义,特别是在考虑皮质内脑机接口(ibci)电极阵列的植入位置时。我们试图评估来自中央前回的神经记录的位置,以及潜在的躯体解剖,是否对能够成功控制iBCI的成像策略有任何影响。三名脊髓损伤患者参加了一项正在进行的iBCI临床试验。根据术前功能成像,参与者在手臂和/或手的中央前回区域植入两个皮质内微电极阵列。当参与者试图进行手、手腕、肘部和肩部的运动时,神经数据被记录下来。我们发现,位于更中间位置的电极阵列在尝试近端手臂运动(肘部,肩部)时记录的活动明显多于外侧阵列,后者捕获的与尝试远端手臂运动(手,手腕)相关的活动更多。我们还评估了在翻译和抓取任务的iBCI解码器校准期间,植入每个参与者的两个阵列对解码精度的相对贡献。对于这两种任务类型,图像策略(例如,伸手与手腕运动)对每个阵列对解码的相对贡献有显著影响。总的来说,我们发现了一些证据,表明他们对手臂和手部的运动有广泛的调整;然而,在大脑皮层的不同空间区域中,每种运动类型的信息获取量存在明显的偏差。这些结果表明,经典的躯体切断术概念可能对iBCI的使用产生真正的影响,并强调在计划iBCI植入时考虑躯体切断术的重要性。
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