脑-机接口
计算机科学
接口(物质)
控制(管理)
人机界面
人工智能
人机交互
机器学习
认知科学
心理学
神经科学
操作系统
人机系统
脑电图
气泡
最大气泡压力法
作者
Johannes Y Lee,SangJoon Lee,Abhishek Mishra,Yan Xu,Brandon McMahan,Brent Gaisford,Charles Kobashigawa,Mike Qu,Chang Xie,Jonathan C. Kao
标识
DOI:10.1101/2024.10.09.615886
摘要
Summary Motor brain-machine interfaces (BMIs) decode neural signals to help people with paralysis move and communicate. Even with important advances in the last two decades, BMIs face key obstacles to clinical viability. Invasive BMIs achieve proficient cursor and robotic arm control but require neurosurgery, posing significant risk to patients. Non-invasive BMIs do not have neurosurgical risk, but achieve lower performance, sometimes being prohibitively frustrating to use and preventing widespread adoption. We take a step toward breaking this performance-risk tradeoff by building performant non-invasive BMIs. The critical limitation that bounds decoder performance in non-invasive BMIs is their poor neural signal-to-noise ratio. To overcome this, we contribute (1) a novel EEG decoding approach and (2) artificial intelligence (AI) copilots that infer task goals and aid action completion. We demonstrate that with this “AI-BMI,” in tandem with a new adaptive decoding approach using a convolutional neural network (CNN) and ReFIT-like Kalman filter (KF), healthy users and a paralyzed participant can autonomously and proficiently control computer cursors and robotic arms. Using an AI copilot improves goal acquisition speed by up to 4.3 × in the standard center-out 8 cursor control task and enables users to control a robotic arm to perform the sequential pick-and-place task, moving 4 randomly placed blocks to 4 randomly chosen locations. As AI copilots improve, this approach may result in clinically viable non-invasive AI-BMIs.
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