Brain-machine interface learning is facilitated by specific patterning of distributed cortical feedback
Brain-machine interface learning is facilitated by specific patterning of distributed cortical feedback
Neuroprosthetics offer great hope for motor-impaired patients. One obstacle is that fine motor control requires near-instantaneous, rich somatosensory feedback. Such distributed feedback may be recreated in a brain-machine interface using distributed artificial stimulation across the cortical surface. Here, we hypothesized that neuronal stimulation must be contiguous in its spatiotemporal dynamics in order to be efficiently integrated by sensorimotor circuits. Using a closed-loop brain-machine interface, we trained head-fixed mice to control a virtual cursor by modulating the activity of motor cortex neurons. We provided artificial feedback in real time with distributed optogenetic stimulation patterns in the primary somatosensory cortex. Mice developed a specific motor strategy and succeeded to learn the task only when the optogenetic feedback pattern was spatially and temporally contiguous while it moved across the topography of the somatosensory cortex. These results reveal new properties of sensorimotor cortical integration and set new constraints on the design of neuroprosthetics.
Abbasi Aamir、Ego-Stengel Valerie、Lassagne Henri、Estebanez Luc、Goueytes Dorian、Shulz Daniel E.
生物科学研究方法、生物科学研究技术生物工程学生理学
Abbasi Aamir,Ego-Stengel Valerie,Lassagne Henri,Estebanez Luc,Goueytes Dorian,Shulz Daniel E..Brain-machine interface learning is facilitated by specific patterning of distributed cortical feedback[EB/OL].(2025-03-28)[2025-04-28].https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2019.12.12.873794.点此复制
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