Title :
An overview of neural engineering
Author :
Robinson, Charles J.
Author_Institution :
Center for Biomed. Eng. & Rehabilitation Sci., Louisiana Tech. Univ., Ruston, LA, USA
Abstract :
A comprehensive definition of Neural Engineering is presented from scientific, technological, clinical and end-user perspectives. Neural Engineering is the synergistic and highly interdisciplinary marriage of the neuroscience disciplines and those of engineering and computer science. It seeks to tap directly or indirectly into the nervous system to obtain sensory or command and control signals, to activate outgoing neural signals, and/or to influence processing within the central nervous system. Neural Engineering also seeks methods to restore lost or compromised neurological function. Neural Engineering is involved in designing, analyzing, and testing functional interfaces between neuroprosthetic systems and neurobiological systems. Neural Engineering also tests all of these components as systems, both in an engineering sense and in a physiological sense. Neural Engineering´s design goals, achievable through rigorous in vitro, in vivo and clinical research, advance the understanding of sensorimotor neuroscience; and produce neural prostheses that are reliable, robust, safe, functionally transparent and cosmetically acceptable
Keywords :
neurophysiology; patient rehabilitation; prosthetics; reviews; central nervous system; command/control signals; compromised neurological function; cosmetically acceptable prostheses; design goals; micromanufacturing; neurobiological systems; neuroprosthetics; outgoing neural signals activation; rehabilitation engineering; sensorimotor neuroscience; sensory signals; Central nervous system; Command and control systems; Computer science; Nervous system; Neural engineering; Neural prosthesis; Neuroscience; Signal processing; Signal restoration; System testing;
Conference_Titel :
Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society, 2000. Proceedings of the 22nd Annual International Conference of the IEEE
Conference_Location :
Chicago, IL
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-6465-1
DOI :
10.1109/IEMBS.2000.900763