DocumentCode :
663078
Title :
Investigating ocular movements and Vestibular Evoked Potentials for a vestibular neuroprosthesis: Response to pulse trains and baseline stimulation
Author :
Nguyen, T. A. Khoa ; Wangsong Gong ; Poppendieck, W. ; DiGiovanna, Jack ; Micera, Silvestro
Author_Institution :
Center for Neuroprosthetics, Interfaculty Inst. of Bioeng., Lausanne, Switzerland
fYear :
2013
fDate :
6-8 Nov. 2013
Firstpage :
855
Lastpage :
858
Abstract :
No adequate treatment currently exists for bilateral vestibulopathy, which can result in significant decreases of social and physical functioning. To improve patients´ quality of life, vestibular neuroprostheses are being developed. Efficacy of current prototypes is evaluated by recording reflexive eye movements (vestibular ocular reflex, VOR). Vestibular Evoked Potentials (VEPs) provide real-time feedback about peripheral efficacy that could be used to adapt a closed-loop neuroprosthesis to improve performance (e.g., eye movement magnitude and direction). A key building block is the prediction of VOR with VEP. In earlier work, we correlated both in response to single stimulation pulses. While impulse responses are interesting, they do not reflect a typical operating mode. To learn more about VEP at expected modulations, we studied the impact of pulse trains and baseline stimulation on VEP here. At 250 pulses per second, VEP did neither change significantly for pulse trains nor over the course of 30-minute baseline stimulation. VOR, on the other hand, changed with the number of pulses, and was also influenced by baseline stimulation.
Keywords :
bioelectric potentials; biomechanics; biomedical electrodes; eye; feedback; mechanoception; neurophysiology; patient treatment; prosthetics; baseline stimulation response; bilateral vestibulopathy; closed-loop neuroprosthesis; eye movement direction; eye movement magnitude; ocular movements; peripheral efficacy; pulse train response; real-time feedback; reflexive eye movement recording; time 30 min; vestibular evoked potentials; vestibular neuroprosthesis; vestibular ocular reflex recording; Animals; Arrays; Coils; Electric potential; Electrodes; Implants; Probes;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Neural Engineering (NER), 2013 6th International IEEE/EMBS Conference on
Conference_Location :
San Diego, CA
ISSN :
1948-3546
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/NER.2013.6696069
Filename :
6696069
Link To Document :
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