%0 Journal Article %J J Neural Eng %D 2011 %T Decoding vowels and consonants in spoken and imagined words using electrocorticographic signals in humans. %A Pei, Xiao-Mei %A Barbour, Dennis L %A Leuthardt, E C %A Gerwin Schalk %K Adolescent %K Adult %K Brain %K Brain Mapping %K Cerebral Cortex %K Communication Aids for Disabled %K Data Interpretation, Statistical %K Discrimination (Psychology) %K Electrodes, Implanted %K Electroencephalography %K Epilepsy %K Female %K Functional Laterality %K Humans %K Male %K Middle Aged %K Movement %K Speech Perception %K User-Computer Interface %X

Several stories in the popular media have speculated that it may be possible to infer from the brain which word a person is speaking or even thinking. While recent studies have demonstrated that brain signals can give detailed information about actual and imagined actions, such as different types of limb movements or spoken words, concrete experimental evidence for the possibility to 'read the mind', i.e. to interpret internally-generated speech, has been scarce. In this study, we found that it is possible to use signals recorded from the surface of the brain (electrocorticography) to discriminate the vowels and consonants embedded in spoken and in imagined words, and we defined the cortical areas that held the most information about discrimination of vowels and consonants. The results shed light on the distinct mechanisms associated with production of vowels and consonants, and could provide the basis for brain-based communication using imagined speech.

%B J Neural Eng %V 8 %P 046028 %8 08/2011 %G eng %U http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21750369 %N 4 %R 10.1088/1741-2560/8/4/046028 %0 Journal Article %J J Neurosci %D 2011 %T Nonuniform high-gamma (60-500 Hz) power changes dissociate cognitive task and anatomy in human cortex. %A Charles M Gaona %A Sharma, Mohit %A Zachary V. Freudenberg %A Breshears, Jonathan %A Bundy, David T %A Roland, Jarod %A Barbour, Dennis L %A Gerwin Schalk %A Leuthardt, E C %K Acoustic Stimulation %K Adolescent %K Adult %K Analysis of Variance %K Brain Mapping %K Brain Waves %K Cerebral Cortex %K Cognition Disorders %K Electroencephalography %K Epilepsy %K Evoked Potentials %K Female %K Humans %K Male %K Middle Aged %K Neuropsychological Tests %K Nonlinear Dynamics %K Photic Stimulation %K Reaction Time %K Spectrum Analysis %K Time Factors %K Vocabulary %X

High-gamma-band (>60 Hz) power changes in cortical electrophysiology are a reliable indicator of focal, event-related cortical activity. Despite discoveries of oscillatory subthreshold and synchronous suprathreshold activity at the cellular level, there is an increasingly popular view that high-gamma-band amplitude changes recorded from cellular ensembles are the result of asynchronous firing activity that yields wideband and uniform power increases. Others have demonstrated independence of power changes in the low- and high-gamma bands, but to date, no studies have shown evidence of any such independence above 60 Hz. Based on nonuniformities in time-frequency analyses of electrocorticographic (ECoG) signals, we hypothesized that induced high-gamma-band (60-500 Hz) power changes are more heterogeneous than currently understood. Using single-word repetition tasks in six human subjects, we showed that functional responsiveness of different ECoG high-gamma sub-bands can discriminate cognitive task (e.g., hearing, reading, speaking) and cortical locations. Power changes in these sub-bands of the high-gamma range are consistently present within single trials and have statistically different time courses within the trial structure. Moreover, when consolidated across all subjects within three task-relevant anatomic regions (sensorimotor, Broca's area, and superior temporal gyrus), these behavior- and location-dependent power changes evidenced nonuniform trends across the population. Together, the independence and nonuniformity of power changes across a broad range of frequencies suggest that a new approach to evaluating high-gamma-band cortical activity is necessary. These findings show that in addition to time and location, frequency is another fundamental dimension of high-gamma dynamics.

%B J Neurosci %V 31 %P 2091-100 %8 02/2011 %G eng %U http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21307246 %N 6 %R 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4722-10.2011