Decoding executed and imagined grasping movements from distributed non-motor brain areas using a Riemannian decoder

Author:

Ottenhoff Maarten C.,Verwoert Maxime,Goulis Sophocles,Colon Albert J.,Wagner Louis,Tousseyn Simon,van Dijk Johannes P.,Kubben Pieter L.,Herff Christian

Abstract

Using brain activity directly as input for assistive tool control can circumventmuscular dysfunction and increase functional independence for physically impaired people. The motor cortex is commonly targeted for recordings, while growing evidence shows that there exists decodable movement-related neural activity outside of the motor cortex. Several decoding studies demonstrated significant decoding from distributed areas separately. Here, we combine information from all recorded non-motor brain areas and decode executed and imagined movements using a Riemannian decoder. We recorded neural activity from 8 epilepsy patients implanted with stereotactic-electroencephalographic electrodes (sEEG), while they performed an executed and imagined grasping tasks. Before decoding, we excluded all contacts in or adjacent to the central sulcus. The decoder extracts a low-dimensional representation of varying number of components, and classified move/no-move using a minimum-distance-to-geometric-mean Riemannian classifier. We show that executed and imagined movements can be decoded from distributed non-motor brain areas using a Riemannian decoder, reaching an area under the receiver operator characteristic of 0.83 ± 0.11. Furthermore, we highlight the distributedness of the movement-related neural activity, as no single brain area is the main driver of performance. Our decoding results demonstrate a first application of a Riemannian decoder on sEEG data and show that it is able to decode from distributed brain-wide recordings outside of the motor cortex. This brief report highlights the perspective to explore motor-related neural activity beyond the motor cortex, as many areas contain decodable information.

Publisher

Frontiers Media SA

Subject

General Neuroscience

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