Investigating the cortical effect of false positive feedback on motor learning in motor imagery based rehabilitative BCI training.

IF 5.2 2区 医学 Q1 ENGINEERING, BIOMEDICAL Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation Pub Date : 2025-03-18 DOI:10.1186/s12984-025-01597-w
Hojun Jeong, Minsu Song, Sung-Ho Jang, Jonghyun Kim
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Abstract

Background: Motor imagery-based brain-computer interface (MI-BCI) is a promising solution for neurorehabilitation. Many studies proposed that reducing false positive (FP) feedback is crucial for inducing neural plasticity by BCI technology. However, the effect of FP feedback on cortical plasticity induction during MI-BCI training is yet to be investigated.

Objective: This study aims to validate the hypothesis that FP feedback affects the cortical plasticity of the user's MI during MI-BCI training by first comparing two different asynchronous MI-BCI paradigms (with and without FP feedback), and then comparing its effectiveness with that of conventional motor learning methods (passive and active training).

Methods: Twelve healthy volunteers and four patients with stroke participated in the study. We implemented two electroencephalogram-driven asynchronous MI-BCI systems with different feedback conditions. The feedback was provided by a hand exoskeleton robot performing hand open/close task. We assessed the hemodynamic responses in two different feedback conditions and compared them with two conventional motor learning methods using functional near-infrared spectroscopy with an event-related design. The cortical effects of FP feedback were analyzed in different paradigms, as well as in the same paradigm via statistical analysis.

Results: The MI-BCI without FP feedback paradigm induced higher cortical activation in MI, focusing on the contralateral motor area, compared to the paradigm with FP feedback. Additionally, within the same paradigm providing FP feedback, the task period immediately following FP feedback elicited a lower hemodynamic response in the channel located over the contralateral motor area compared to the MI-BCI paradigm without FP feedback (p = 0.021 for healthy people; p = 0.079 for people with stroke). In contrast, task trials where there was no FP feedback just before showed a higher hemodynamic response, similar to the MI-BCI paradigm without FP feedback (p = 0.099 for healthy people, p = 0.084 for people with stroke).

Conclusions: FP feedback reduced cortical activation for the users during MI-BCI training, suggesting a potential negative effect on cortical plasticity. Therefore, minimizing FP feedback may enhance the effectiveness of rehabilitative MI-BCI training by promoting stronger cortical activation and plasticity, particularly in the contralateral motor area.

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基于运动意象的脑机接口康复训练中假正反馈对运动学习的皮质效应研究。
背景:基于运动图像的脑机接口(MI-BCI)是一种很有前途的神经康复解决方案。许多研究表明,减少假阳性反馈是脑机接口技术诱导神经可塑性的关键。然而,在MI-BCI训练过程中,FP反馈对皮质可塑性诱导的影响尚不清楚。目的:本研究旨在通过比较两种不同的异步MI- bci模式(有和没有FP反馈),并将其与传统运动学习方法(被动和主动训练)的有效性进行比较,验证FP反馈在MI- bci训练过程中影响用户MI皮层可塑性的假设。方法:12名健康志愿者和4名脑卒中患者参与研究。我们实现了两个具有不同反馈条件的脑电图驱动的异步MI-BCI系统。反馈由执行手开/闭任务的手外骨骼机器人提供。我们评估了两种不同反馈条件下的血流动力学反应,并使用功能近红外光谱与事件相关设计将其与两种传统运动学习方法进行了比较。通过统计分析,分析了不同范式和同一范式下FP反馈的皮层效应。结果:与有FP反馈的模式相比,没有FP反馈的MI- bci模式诱导了MI更高的皮层激活,主要集中在对侧运动区。此外,在提供FP反馈的同一范式中,与没有FP反馈的MI-BCI范式相比,在FP反馈后立即进行的任务期在位于对侧运动区上方的通道中引发了较低的血流动力学反应(健康人群p = 0.021;中风患者P = 0.079)。相比之下,之前没有FP反馈的任务试验显示出更高的血流动力学反应,类似于没有FP反馈的MI-BCI范式(健康人群p = 0.099,中风患者p = 0.084)。结论:FP反馈在MI-BCI训练中降低了使用者的皮质激活,提示其对皮质可塑性有潜在的负面影响。因此,最小化FP反馈可能通过促进更强的皮质激活和可塑性,特别是在对侧运动区,来提高康复性MI-BCI训练的有效性。
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来源期刊
Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation
Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation 工程技术-工程:生物医学
CiteScore
9.60
自引率
3.90%
发文量
122
审稿时长
24 months
期刊介绍: Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation considers manuscripts on all aspects of research that result from cross-fertilization of the fields of neuroscience, biomedical engineering, and physical medicine & rehabilitation.
期刊最新文献
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