Publication | Closed Access
Control of a brain–computer interface without spike sorting
175
Citations
14
References
2009
Year
Neural RecodingMotor ControlSorted SpikesBiomedical EngineeringNeurochipSocial SciencesRhesus MonkeysMotor NeuroscienceHealth SciencesSensorimotor ControlSensorimotor IntegrationSpike SortingBrain CircuitryNeural InterfaceNeural InterfacesBrain-computer InterfaceNeuroengineeringNeurophysiologyComputational NeuroscienceSimplest Signal ProcessingMotor SystemNeuroscienceCentral Nervous SystemBrain-like ComputingBraincomputer Interface
Two rhesus monkeys were trained to move a cursor using neural activity recorded with silicon arrays of 96 microelectrodes implanted in the primary motor cortex. We have developed a method to extract movement information from the recorded single and multi-unit activity in the absence of spike sorting. By setting a single threshold across all channels and fitting the resultant events with a spline tuning function, a control signal was extracted from this population using a Bayesian particle-filter extraction algorithm. The animals achieved high-quality control comparable to the performance of decoding schemes based on sorted spikes. Our results suggest that even the simplest signal processing is sufficient for high-quality neuroprosthetic control.
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