4.8 Article

Single-trial dynamics of motor cortex and their applications to brain-machine interfaces

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 6, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/ncomms8759

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation
  2. Stanford Medical Scholars Program
  3. Howard Hughes Medical Institute Medical Research Fellows Program
  4. Paul and Daisy Soros Fellowship
  5. Stanford Medical Scientist Training Program Christopher and Dana Reeve Paralysis Foundation
  6. Burroughs Welcome Fund Career Awards in the Biomedical Sciences, Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency Reorganization and Plasticity to Accelerate Injury Recovery [N66001-10-C-2010]
  7. US National Institutes of Health Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke Transformative Research Award [R01NS076460]
  8. US National Institutes of Health Director's Pioneer Award [8DP1HD075623-04]
  9. US National Institutes of Health from the NIMH [5R01MH09964703]
  10. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency NeuroFAST award from BTO [W911NF-14-2-0013]

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Increasing evidence suggests that neural population responses have their own internal drive, or dynamics, that describe how the neural population evolves through time. An important prediction of neural dynamical models is that previously observed neural activity is informative of noisy yet-to-be-observed activity on single-trials, and may thus have a denoising effect. To investigate this prediction, we built and characterized dynamical models of single-trial motor cortical activity. We find these models capture salient dynamical features of the neural population and are informative of future neural activity on single trials. To assess how neural dynamics may beneficially denoise single-trial neural activity, we incorporate neural dynamics into a brain-machine interface (BMI). In online experiments, we find that a neural dynamical BMI achieves substantially higher performance than its non-dynamical counterpart. These results provide evidence that neural dynamics beneficially inform the temporal evolution of neural activity on single trials and may directly impact the performance of BMIs.

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