• DocumentCode
    3182887
  • Title

    Operant conditioning of a multiple degree-of-freedom brain-machine interface in a primate model of amputation

  • Author

    Balasubramanian, Karthikeyan ; Southerland, Jason ; Vaidya, Mahesh ; Kai Qian ; Eleryan, Ahmed ; Fagg, Andrew H. ; Sluzky, Marc ; Oweiss, Karim ; Hatsopoulos, Nicholas

  • Author_Institution
    Comput. Neurosci., Univ. of Chicago, Chicago, IL, USA
  • fYear
    2013
  • fDate
    3-7 July 2013
  • Firstpage
    303
  • Lastpage
    306
  • Abstract
    Operant conditioning with biofeedback has been shown to be an effective method to modify neural activity to generate goal-directed actions in a brain-machine interface. It is particularly useful when neural activity cannot be mathematically mapped to motor actions of the actual body such as in the case of amputation. Here, we implement an operant conditioning approach with visual feedback in which an amputated monkey is trained to control a multiple degree-of-freedom robot to perform a reach-to-grasp behavior. A key innovation is that each controlled dimension represents a behaviorally relevant synergy among a set of joint degrees-of-freedom. We present a number of behavioral metrics by which to assess improvements in BMI control with exposure to the system. The use of non-human primates with chronic amputation is arguably the most clinically-relevant model of human amputation that could have direct implications for developing a neural prosthesis to treat humans with missing upper limbs.
  • Keywords
    biomechanics; brain-computer interfaces; feedback; handicapped aids; manipulators; medical robotics; neurophysiology; prosthetics; BMI control; actual body; behavioral metrics; biofeedback; chronic amputation; clinically-relevant model; goal-directed action; human amputation; joint degrees-of-freedom; missing upper limb treatment; motor action; multiple degree-of-freedom brain-machine interface; multiple degree-of-freedom robot; neural activity; neural prosthesis; nonhuman primate; operant conditioning approach; primate model; reach-to-grasp behavior; synergy; visual feedback; Decoding; Joints; Measurement; Neurons; Robot kinematics; Robot sensing systems;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society (EMBC), 2013 35th Annual International Conference of the IEEE
  • Conference_Location
    Osaka
  • ISSN
    1557-170X
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/EMBC.2013.6609497
  • Filename
    6609497