Developing an oculomotor brain-computer interface and charactering its dynamic functional network

To date, invasive brain-computer interface (BCI) research has largely focused on replacing lost limb functions using signals from hand/arm areas of motor cortex. However, the oculomotor system may be better suited to BCI applications involving rapid serial selection from spatial targets, such as cho...

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Main Author: Jia, Nan
Language:en_US
Published: 2018
Subjects:
BCI
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/2144/27357
id ndltd-bu.edu-oai-open.bu.edu-2144-27357
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-bu.edu-oai-open.bu.edu-2144-273572019-04-03T10:19:36Z Developing an oculomotor brain-computer interface and charactering its dynamic functional network Jia, Nan Neurosciences BCI Eye movement Functional connectivity Neuroscience Oculomotor Rhythm To date, invasive brain-computer interface (BCI) research has largely focused on replacing lost limb functions using signals from hand/arm areas of motor cortex. However, the oculomotor system may be better suited to BCI applications involving rapid serial selection from spatial targets, such as choosing from a set of possible words displayed on a computer screen in an augmentative and alternative communication application. First, we develop an intracortical oculomotor BCI based on the delayed saccade paradigm and demonstrate its feasibility to decode intended saccadic eye movement direction in primates. Using activity from three frontal cortical areas implicated in oculomotor production – dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, supplementary eye field, and frontal eye field – we could decode intended saccade direction in real time with high accuracy, particularly at contralateral locations. In a number of analyses in the decoding context, we investigated the amount of saccade-related information contained in different implant regions and in different neural measures. A novel neural measure using power in the 80-500 Hz band is proposed as the optimal signal for this BCI purpose. In the second part of this thesis, we characterize the interactions between the neural signals recorded from electrodes in these three implant areas. We employ a number of techniques to quantify the spectrotemporal dynamics in this complex network, and we describe the resulting functional connectivity patterns between the three implant regions in the context of eye-movement production. In addition, we compare and contrast the amount of saccade-related information present in the coupling strengths in the network, on both an electrode-to-electrode scale and an area-to-area scale. Different frequency bands stand out during different epochs of the task, and their information contents are distinct between implant regions. For example, the 13-30 Hz band stands out during the delay epoch, and the 8-12 Hz band is relevant during target and response epochs. This work extends the boundary of BCI research into the oculomotor domain, and invites potential applications by showing its feasibility. Furthermore, it elucidates the complex dynamics of the functional coupling underlying oculomotor production across multiple areas of frontal cortex. 2018-03-01T19:42:49Z 2018-03-01T19:42:49Z 2017 2018-02-02T17:23:03Z Thesis/Dissertation https://hdl.handle.net/2144/27357 en_US Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Neurosciences
BCI
Eye movement
Functional connectivity
Neuroscience
Oculomotor
Rhythm
spellingShingle Neurosciences
BCI
Eye movement
Functional connectivity
Neuroscience
Oculomotor
Rhythm
Jia, Nan
Developing an oculomotor brain-computer interface and charactering its dynamic functional network
description To date, invasive brain-computer interface (BCI) research has largely focused on replacing lost limb functions using signals from hand/arm areas of motor cortex. However, the oculomotor system may be better suited to BCI applications involving rapid serial selection from spatial targets, such as choosing from a set of possible words displayed on a computer screen in an augmentative and alternative communication application. First, we develop an intracortical oculomotor BCI based on the delayed saccade paradigm and demonstrate its feasibility to decode intended saccadic eye movement direction in primates. Using activity from three frontal cortical areas implicated in oculomotor production – dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, supplementary eye field, and frontal eye field – we could decode intended saccade direction in real time with high accuracy, particularly at contralateral locations. In a number of analyses in the decoding context, we investigated the amount of saccade-related information contained in different implant regions and in different neural measures. A novel neural measure using power in the 80-500 Hz band is proposed as the optimal signal for this BCI purpose. In the second part of this thesis, we characterize the interactions between the neural signals recorded from electrodes in these three implant areas. We employ a number of techniques to quantify the spectrotemporal dynamics in this complex network, and we describe the resulting functional connectivity patterns between the three implant regions in the context of eye-movement production. In addition, we compare and contrast the amount of saccade-related information present in the coupling strengths in the network, on both an electrode-to-electrode scale and an area-to-area scale. Different frequency bands stand out during different epochs of the task, and their information contents are distinct between implant regions. For example, the 13-30 Hz band stands out during the delay epoch, and the 8-12 Hz band is relevant during target and response epochs. This work extends the boundary of BCI research into the oculomotor domain, and invites potential applications by showing its feasibility. Furthermore, it elucidates the complex dynamics of the functional coupling underlying oculomotor production across multiple areas of frontal cortex.
author Jia, Nan
author_facet Jia, Nan
author_sort Jia, Nan
title Developing an oculomotor brain-computer interface and charactering its dynamic functional network
title_short Developing an oculomotor brain-computer interface and charactering its dynamic functional network
title_full Developing an oculomotor brain-computer interface and charactering its dynamic functional network
title_fullStr Developing an oculomotor brain-computer interface and charactering its dynamic functional network
title_full_unstemmed Developing an oculomotor brain-computer interface and charactering its dynamic functional network
title_sort developing an oculomotor brain-computer interface and charactering its dynamic functional network
publishDate 2018
url https://hdl.handle.net/2144/27357
work_keys_str_mv AT jianan developinganoculomotorbraincomputerinterfaceandcharacteringitsdynamicfunctionalnetwork
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