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Tracking single units in chronic, large scale, neural recordings for brain machine interface applications

In the study of population coding in neurobiological systems, tracking unit identity may be critical to assess possible changes in the coding properties of neuronal constituents over prolonged periods of time. Ensuring unit stability is even more critical for reliable neural decoding of motor variab...

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Autores principales: Eleryan, Ahmed, Vaidya, Mukta, Southerland, Joshua, Badreldin, Islam S., Balasubramanian, Karthikeyan, Fagg, Andrew H., Hatsopoulos, Nicholas, Oweiss, Karim
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4086297/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25071546
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fneng.2014.00023
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author Eleryan, Ahmed
Vaidya, Mukta
Southerland, Joshua
Badreldin, Islam S.
Balasubramanian, Karthikeyan
Fagg, Andrew H.
Hatsopoulos, Nicholas
Oweiss, Karim
author_facet Eleryan, Ahmed
Vaidya, Mukta
Southerland, Joshua
Badreldin, Islam S.
Balasubramanian, Karthikeyan
Fagg, Andrew H.
Hatsopoulos, Nicholas
Oweiss, Karim
author_sort Eleryan, Ahmed
collection PubMed
description In the study of population coding in neurobiological systems, tracking unit identity may be critical to assess possible changes in the coding properties of neuronal constituents over prolonged periods of time. Ensuring unit stability is even more critical for reliable neural decoding of motor variables in intra-cortically controlled brain-machine interfaces (BMIs). Variability in intrinsic spike patterns, tuning characteristics, and single-unit identity over chronic use is a major challenge to maintaining this stability, requiring frequent daily calibration of neural decoders in BMI sessions by an experienced human operator. Here, we report on a unit-stability tracking algorithm that efficiently and autonomously identifies putative single-units that are stable across many sessions using a relatively short duration recording interval at the start of each session. The algorithm first builds a database of features extracted from units' average spike waveforms and firing patterns across many days of recording. It then uses these features to decide whether spike occurrences on the same channel on one day belong to the same unit recorded on another day or not. We assessed the overall performance of the algorithm for different choices of features and classifiers trained using human expert judgment, and quantified it as a function of accuracy and execution time. Overall, we found a trade-off between accuracy and execution time with increasing data volumes from chronically implanted rhesus macaques, with an average of 12 s processing time per channel at ~90% classification accuracy. Furthermore, 77% of the resulting putative single-units matched those tracked by human experts. These results demonstrate that over the span of a few months of recordings, automated unit tracking can be performed with high accuracy and used to streamline the calibration phase during BMI sessions. Our findings may be useful to the study of population coding during learning, and to improve the reliability of BMI systems and accelerate their deployment in clinical applications.
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spelling pubmed-40862972014-07-28 Tracking single units in chronic, large scale, neural recordings for brain machine interface applications Eleryan, Ahmed Vaidya, Mukta Southerland, Joshua Badreldin, Islam S. Balasubramanian, Karthikeyan Fagg, Andrew H. Hatsopoulos, Nicholas Oweiss, Karim Front Neuroeng Neuroscience In the study of population coding in neurobiological systems, tracking unit identity may be critical to assess possible changes in the coding properties of neuronal constituents over prolonged periods of time. Ensuring unit stability is even more critical for reliable neural decoding of motor variables in intra-cortically controlled brain-machine interfaces (BMIs). Variability in intrinsic spike patterns, tuning characteristics, and single-unit identity over chronic use is a major challenge to maintaining this stability, requiring frequent daily calibration of neural decoders in BMI sessions by an experienced human operator. Here, we report on a unit-stability tracking algorithm that efficiently and autonomously identifies putative single-units that are stable across many sessions using a relatively short duration recording interval at the start of each session. The algorithm first builds a database of features extracted from units' average spike waveforms and firing patterns across many days of recording. It then uses these features to decide whether spike occurrences on the same channel on one day belong to the same unit recorded on another day or not. We assessed the overall performance of the algorithm for different choices of features and classifiers trained using human expert judgment, and quantified it as a function of accuracy and execution time. Overall, we found a trade-off between accuracy and execution time with increasing data volumes from chronically implanted rhesus macaques, with an average of 12 s processing time per channel at ~90% classification accuracy. Furthermore, 77% of the resulting putative single-units matched those tracked by human experts. These results demonstrate that over the span of a few months of recordings, automated unit tracking can be performed with high accuracy and used to streamline the calibration phase during BMI sessions. Our findings may be useful to the study of population coding during learning, and to improve the reliability of BMI systems and accelerate their deployment in clinical applications. Frontiers Media S.A. 2014-07-08 /pmc/articles/PMC4086297/ /pubmed/25071546 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fneng.2014.00023 Text en Copyright © 2014 Eleryan, Vaidya, Southerland, Badreldin, Balasubramanian, Fagg, Hatsopoulos and Oweiss. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) or licensor are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Neuroscience
Eleryan, Ahmed
Vaidya, Mukta
Southerland, Joshua
Badreldin, Islam S.
Balasubramanian, Karthikeyan
Fagg, Andrew H.
Hatsopoulos, Nicholas
Oweiss, Karim
Tracking single units in chronic, large scale, neural recordings for brain machine interface applications
title Tracking single units in chronic, large scale, neural recordings for brain machine interface applications
title_full Tracking single units in chronic, large scale, neural recordings for brain machine interface applications
title_fullStr Tracking single units in chronic, large scale, neural recordings for brain machine interface applications
title_full_unstemmed Tracking single units in chronic, large scale, neural recordings for brain machine interface applications
title_short Tracking single units in chronic, large scale, neural recordings for brain machine interface applications
title_sort tracking single units in chronic, large scale, neural recordings for brain machine interface applications
topic Neuroscience
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4086297/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25071546
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fneng.2014.00023
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