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Abstract

Electrocorticography of the primary motor cortex (M1) is a promising tool for controlling a brain-computer interface (BCI). Electrocorticograms (ECoG) of the human M1 within the central sulcus (intrasulcal ECoG) have been rarely examined. In order to evaluate the usefulness of intrasulcal ECoG for BCI, we examined patients with subdural electrodes placed temporarily inside the central sulcus and over the sensorimotor cortex (gyral ECoG). Five patients were asked to perform or imagine two or three classes of simple upper limb movements. Univariate statistical analysis of the results revealed that the intrasulcal ECoG on M1 showed significant variability across movement classes. A support vector machine was used for classification of single-trial ECoG signals to infer movement class (neural decoding). The movement classes were predicted with 80-90% accuracy (chance level: 33% or 50%). To reveal the relative importance of anatomical areas for neural decoding, the decoding performance was compared between gyral and intrasulcal ECoGs. The intrasulcal ECoG on the motor bank showed higher performance than the equally-sized gyral ECoG or the intrasulcal ECoG on the sensory bank. Analysis using a short time window revealed that movement class could be decoded even before movement onset. These results suggest the usefulness of intrasulcal ECoG on M1 to infer upper limb movements and present a promising application for a practical BCI system.

Details

Title
Neural decoding using gyral and intrasulcal electrocorticograms
Author
Yanagisawa, Takufumi; Hirata, Masayuki; Saitoh, Youichi; Kato, Amami; Shibuya, Daisuke; Kamitani, Yukiyasu; Yoshimine, Toshiki
Pages
1099-1106
Publication year
2009
Publication date
May 1, 2009
Publisher
Elsevier Limited
ISSN
10538119
e-ISSN
10959572
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1506784900
Copyright
Copyright Elsevier Limited May 1, 2009