Publication | Open Access
High-resolution neural recordings improve the accuracy of speech decoding
61
Citations
59
References
2023
Year
Neural RecodingNeurolinguisticsSpeech EnhancementBiomedical EngineeringSocial SciencesSpeech RecognitionSpeech DecodingRobust Speech RecognitionCognitive ElectrophysiologyNeurologyHealth SciencesNeurological MonitoringNeuroimagingHigh-spatial ResolutionDistant Speech RecognitionNeural InterfaceSpeech CommunicationSpeech TechnologyBrain-computer InterfaceAccurate DecodingHigher Spatial ResolutionNeuroengineeringNeurophysiologyEeg Signal ProcessingSpeech AcousticsSpeech ProcessingHuman NeuroscienceNeuroscienceBrain ElectrophysiologySpeech Perception
Patients suffering from debilitating neurodegenerative diseases often lose the ability to communicate, detrimentally affecting their quality of life. One solution to restore communication is to decode signals directly from the brain to enable neural speech prostheses. However, decoding has been limited by coarse neural recordings which inadequately capture the rich spatio-temporal structure of human brain signals. To resolve this limitation, we performed high-resolution, micro-electrocorticographic (µECoG) neural recordings during intra-operative speech production. We obtained neural signals with 57× higher spatial resolution and 48% higher signal-to-noise ratio compared to macro-ECoG and SEEG. This increased signal quality improved decoding by 35% compared to standard intracranial signals. Accurate decoding was dependent on the high-spatial resolution of the neural interface. Non-linear decoding models designed to utilize enhanced spatio-temporal neural information produced better results than linear techniques. We show that high-density µECoG can enable high-quality speech decoding for future neural speech prostheses.
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