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Mapping ECoG channel contributions to trajectory and muscle activity prediction in human sensorimotor cortex.


ABSTRACT: Studies on brain-machine interface techniques have shown that electrocorticography (ECoG) is an effective modality for predicting limb trajectories and muscle activity in humans. Motor control studies have also identified distributions of "extrinsic-like" and "intrinsic-like" neurons in the premotor (PM) and primary motor (M1) cortices. Here, we investigated whether trajectories and muscle activity predicted from ECoG were obtained based on signals derived from extrinsic-like or intrinsic-like neurons. Three participants carried objects of three different masses along the same counterclockwise path on a table. Trajectories of the object and upper arm muscle activity were predicted using a sparse linear regression. Weight matrices for the predictors were then compared to determine if the ECoG channels contributed more information about trajectory or muscle activity. We found that channels over both PM and M1 contributed highly to trajectory prediction, while a channel over M1 was the highest contributor for muscle activity prediction.

SUBMITTER: Nakanishi Y 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC5374467 | biostudies-literature | 2017 Mar

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Mapping ECoG channel contributions to trajectory and muscle activity prediction in human sensorimotor cortex.

Nakanishi Yasuhiko Y   Yanagisawa Takufumi T   Shin Duk D   Kambara Hiroyuki H   Yoshimura Natsue N   Tanaka Masataka M   Fukuma Ryohei R   Kishima Haruhiko H   Hirata Masayuki M   Koike Yasuharu Y  

Scientific reports 20170331


Studies on brain-machine interface techniques have shown that electrocorticography (ECoG) is an effective modality for predicting limb trajectories and muscle activity in humans. Motor control studies have also identified distributions of "extrinsic-like" and "intrinsic-like" neurons in the premotor (PM) and primary motor (M1) cortices. Here, we investigated whether trajectories and muscle activity predicted from ECoG were obtained based on signals derived from extrinsic-like or intrinsic-like n  ...[more]

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