Decoding four hand gestures with a single bipolar pair of electrocorticography electrodes

Publication date

2021-10

Authors

Verwoert, Maxime
Vansteensel, Mariska J.ORCID 0000-0002-9252-5116ISNI 0000000392447362
Freudenburg, Zachary V.ORCID 0000-0002-2790-0020
Aarnoutse, Erik J.
Leijten, F S SORCID 0000-0003-2603-3364ISNI 0000000396446949
Ramsey, Nick F.ORCID 0000-0002-7136-259XISNI 0000000399572879
Branco, Mariana PORCID 0000-0002-7316-8846

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

Collections

Open Access logo

License

taverne

Abstract

Objective. Electrocorticography (ECoG) based brain-computer interfaces (BCIs) can be used to restore communication in individuals with locked-in syndrome. In motor-based BCIs, the number of degrees-of-freedom, and thus the speed of the BCI, directly depends on the number of classes that can be discriminated from the neural activity in the sensorimotor cortex. When considering minimally invasive BCI implants, the size of the subdural ECoG implant must be minimized without compromising the number of degrees-of-freedom. Approach. Here we investigated if four hand gestures could be decoded using a single ECoG strip of four consecutive electrodes spaced 1 cm apart and compared the performance between a unipolar and a bipolar montage. For that we collected data of seven individuals with intractable epilepsy implanted with ECoG grids, covering the hand region of the sensorimotor cortex. Based on the implanted grids, we generated virtual ECoG strips and compared the decoding accuracy between (a) a single unipolar electrode (Unipolar Electrode), (b) a combination of four unipolar electrodes (Unipolar Strip), (c) a single bipolar pair (Bipolar Pair) and (d) a combination of six bipolar pairs (Bipolar Strip). Main results. We show that four hand gestures can be equally well decoded using 'Unipolar Strips' (mean 67.4 ± 11.7%), 'Bipolar Strips' (mean 66.6 ± 12.1%) and 'Bipolar Pairs' (mean 67.6 ± 9.4%), while 'Unipolar Electrodes' (61.6 ± 5.9%) performed significantly worse compared to 'Unipolar Strips' and 'Bipolar Pairs'. Significance. We conclude that a single bipolar pair is a potential candidate for minimally invasive motor-based BCIs and encourage the use of ECoG as a robust and reliable BCI platform for multi-class movement decoding.

Keywords

bipolar, brain-computer interface, electrocorticography, minimally invasive, sign language, unipolar, Taverne, Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience, Biomedical Engineering, Journal Article

Citation

Verwoert, M, Vansteensel, M J, Freudenburg, Z V, Aarnoutse, E J, Leijten, F S S, Ramsey, N F & Branco, M P 2021, 'Decoding four hand gestures with a single bipolar pair of electrocorticography electrodes', Journal of Neural Engineering, vol. 18, no. 5, 056065, pp. 1-10. https://doi.org/10.1088/1741-2552/ac2c9f