%0 Journal Article %J Epilepsy Behav %D 2011 %T Proceedings of the Second International Workshop on Advances in Electrocorticography. %A A L Ritaccio %A Boatman-Reich, Dana %A Peter Brunner %A Cervenka, Mackenzie C %A Cole, Andrew J %A Nathan E. Crone %A Duckrow, Robert %A Korzeniewska, Anna %A Litt, Brian %A Miller, John W %A Moran, D %A Parvizi, Josef %A Viventi, Jonathan %A Williams, Justin C %A Gerwin Schalk %K Brain %K Brain Mapping %K Brain Waves %K Diagnosis, Computer-Assisted %K Electroencephalography %K Epilepsy %K Humans %K United States %K User-Computer Interface %X

The Second International Workshop on Advances in Electrocorticography (ECoG) was convened in San Diego, CA, USA, on November 11-12, 2010. Between this meeting and the inaugural 2009 event, a much clearer picture has been emerging of cortical ECoG physiology and its relationship to local field potentials and single-cell recordings. Innovations in material engineering are advancing the goal of a stable long-term recording interface. Continued evolution of ECoG-driven brain-computer interface technology is determining innovation in neuroprosthetics. Improvements in instrumentation and statistical methodologies continue to elucidate ECoG correlates of normal human function as well as the ictal state. This proceedings document summarizes the current status of this rapidly evolving field.

%B Epilepsy Behav %V 22 %P 641-50 %8 12/2011 %G eng %U http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22036287 %N 4 %R 10.1016/j.yebeh.2011.09.028 %0 Journal Article %J J Neural Eng %D 2009 %T Decoding flexion of individual fingers using electrocorticographic signals in humans. %A Kubánek, J %A Miller, John W %A Ojemann, J G %A Jonathan Wolpaw %A Gerwin Schalk %K Adolescent %K Adult %K Biomechanics %K Brain %K Electrodiagnosis %K Epilepsy %K Female %K Fingers %K Humans %K Male %K Microelectrodes %K Middle Aged %K Motor Activity %K Rest %K Thumb %K Time Factors %K Young Adult %X

Brain signals can provide the basis for a non-muscular communication and control system, a brain-computer interface (BCI), for people with motor disabilities. A common approach to creating BCI devices is to decode kinematic parameters of movements using signals recorded by intracortical microelectrodes. Recent studies have shown that kinematic parameters of hand movements can also be accurately decoded from signals recorded by electrodes placed on the surface of the brain (electrocorticography (ECoG)). In the present study, we extend these results by demonstrating that it is also possible to decode the time course of the flexion of individual fingers using ECoG signals in humans, and by showing that these flexion time courses are highly specific to the moving finger. These results provide additional support for the hypothesis that ECoG could be the basis for powerful clinically practical BCI systems, and also indicate that ECoG is useful for studying cortical dynamics related to motor function.

%B J Neural Eng %V 6 %P 066001 %8 12/2009 %G eng %U http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19794237 %N 6 %R 10.1088/1741-2560/6/6/066001 %0 Conference Proceedings %B Conf Proc IEEE Eng Med Biol Soc %D 2009 %T Detection of spontaneous class-specific visual stimuli with high temporal accuracy in human electrocorticography. %A Miller, John W %A Hermes, Dora %A Gerwin Schalk %A Ramsey, Nick F %A Jagadeesh, Bharathi %A den Nijs, Marcel %A Ojemann, J G %A Rao, Rajesh P N %K Algorithms %K Electrocardiography %K Evoked Potentials, Visual %K Humans %K Male %K Pattern Recognition, Automated %K Pattern Recognition, Visual %K Photic Stimulation %K Reproducibility of Results %K Sensitivity and Specificity %K User-Computer Interface %K Visual Cortex %X Most brain-computer interface classification experiments from electrical potential recordings have been focused on the identification of classes of stimuli or behavior where the timing of experimental parameters is known or pre-designated. Real world experience, however, is spontaneous, and to this end we describe an experiment predicting the occurrence, timing, and types of visual stimuli perceived by a human subject from electrocorticographic recordings. All 300 of 300 presented stimuli were correctly detected, with a temporal precision of order 20 ms. The type of stimulus (face/house) was correctly identified in 95% of these cases. There were approximately 20 false alarm events, corresponding to a late 2nd neuronal response to a previously identified event. %B Conf Proc IEEE Eng Med Biol Soc %V 2009 %P 6465-8 %8 2009 %G eng %R 10.1109/IEMBS.2009.5333546 %0 Conference Proceedings %B Conf Proc IEEE Eng Med Biol Soc %D 2008 %T Three cases of feature correlation in an electrocorticographic BCI. %A Miller, John W %A Blakely, Timothy %A Gerwin Schalk %A den Nijs, Marcel %A Rao, Rajesh P N %A Ojemann, J G %K Adolescent %K Adult %K Algorithms %K Electrocardiography %K Evoked Potentials, Motor %K Female %K Humans %K Male %K Middle Aged %K Motor Cortex %K Pattern Recognition, Automated %K Statistics as Topic %K Task Performance and Analysis %K User-Computer Interface %X Three human subjects participated in a closed-loop brain computer interface cursor control experiment mediated by implanted subdural electrocorticographic arrays. The paradigm consisted of several stages: baseline recording, hand and tongue motor tasks as the basis for feature selection, two closed-loop one-dimensional feedback experiments with each of these features, and a two-dimensional feedback experiment using both of the features simultaneously. The two selected features were simple channel and frequency band combinations associated with change during hand and tongue movement. Inter-feature correlation and cross-correlation between features during different epochs of each task were quantified for each stage of the experiment. Our anecdotal, three subject, result suggests that while high correlation between horizontal and vertical control signal can initially preclude successful two-dimensional cursor control, a feedback-based learning strategy can be successfully employed by the subject to overcome this limitation and progressively decorrelate these control signals. %B Conf Proc IEEE Eng Med Biol Soc %P 5318-21 %8 2008 %G eng %R 10.1109/IEMBS.2008.4650415 %0 Journal Article %J J Neural Eng %D 2007 %T Decoding two-dimensional movement trajectories using electrocorticographic signals in humans. %A Gerwin Schalk %A Kubánek, J %A Miller, John W %A Nicholas R Anderson %A Leuthardt, E C %A Ojemann, J G %A Limbrick, D %A Moran, D %A Lester A Gerhardt %A Jonathan Wolpaw %K Adult %K Algorithms %K Arm %K Brain Mapping %K Cerebral Cortex %K Electroencephalography %K Evoked Potentials, Motor %K Female %K Humans %K Male %K Movement %X

Signals from the brain could provide a non-muscular communication and control system, a brain-computer interface (BCI), for people who are severely paralyzed. A common BCI research strategy begins by decoding kinematic parameters from brain signals recorded during actual arm movement. It has been assumed that these parameters can be derived accurately only from signals recorded by intracortical microelectrodes, but the long-term stability of such electrodes is uncertain. The present study disproves this widespread assumption by showing in humans that kinematic parameters can also be decoded from signals recorded by subdural electrodes on the cortical surface (ECoG) with an accuracy comparable to that achieved in monkey studies using intracortical microelectrodes. A new ECoG feature labeled the local motor potential (LMP) provided the most information about movement. Furthermore, features displayed cosine tuning that has previously been described only for signals recorded within the brain. These results suggest that ECoG could be a more stable and less invasive alternative to intracortical electrodes for BCI systems, and could also prove useful in studies of motor function.

%B J Neural Eng %V 4 %P 264-75 %8 09/2007 %G eng %U http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17873429 %N 3 %R 10.1088/1741-2560/4/3/012 %0 Journal Article %J Neurosurgery %D 2007 %T Electrocorticographic Frequency Alteration Mapping: A Clinical Technique for Mapping the Motor Cortex. %A Leuthardt, E C %A Miller, John W %A Nicholas R Anderson %A Gerwin Schalk %A Dowling, Joshua %A Miller, John W %A Moran, D %A Ojemann, J G %K Adult %K Biological Clocks %K Brain Mapping %K Electric Stimulation %K Electrodes, Implanted %K Electroencephalography %K Female %K Hand %K Humans %K Male %K Middle Aged %K Motor Cortex %K Oscillometry %K Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted %K Tongue %X

OBJECTIVE: 

Electrocortical stimulation (ECS) has been well established for delineating the eloquent cortex. However, ECS is still coarse and inefficient in delineating regions of the functional cortex and can be hampered by after-discharges. Given these constraints, an adjunct approach to defining the motor cortex is the use of electrocorticographic signal changes associated with active regions of the cortex. The broad range of frequency oscillations are categorized into two main groups with respect to the sensorimotor cortex: low and high frequency bands. The low frequency bands tend to show a power reduction with cortical activation, whereas the high frequency bands show power increases. These power changes associated with the activated cortex could potentially provide a powerful tool in delineating areas of the motor cortex. We explore electrocorticographic signal alterations as they occur with activated regions of the motor cortex, as well as its potential in clinical brain mapping applications.

METHODS: 

We evaluated seven patients who underwent invasive monitoring for seizure localization. Each patient had extraoperative ECS mapping to identify the motor cortex. All patients also performed overt hand and tongue motor tasks to identify associated frequency power changes in regard to location and degree of concordance with ECS results that localized either hand or tongue motor function.

RESULTS: 

The low frequency bands had a high sensitivity (88.9-100%) and a lower specificity (79.0-82.6%) for identifying electrodes with either hand or tongue ECS motor responses. The high frequency bands had a lower sensitivity (72.7-88.9%) and a higher specificity (92.4-94.9%) in correlation with the same respective ECS positive electrodes.

CONCLUSION: 

The concordance between stimulation and spectral power changes demonstrate the possible utility of electrocorticographic frequency alteration mapping as an adjunct method to improve the efficiency and resolution of identifying the motor cortex.

%B Neurosurgery %V 60 %P 260-70; discussion 270-1 %8 04/2007 %G eng %U http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17415162 %N 4 Suppl 2 %R 10.1227/01.NEU.0000255413.70807.6E %0 Journal Article %J J Neurosci %D 2007 %T Spectral Changes in Cortical Surface Potentials During Motor Movement. %A Miller, John W %A Leuthardt, E C %A Gerwin Schalk %A Rao, Rajesh P N %A Nicholas R Anderson %A Moran, D %A Miller, John W %A Ojemann, J G %K Adult %K Brain Mapping %K Female %K Humans %K Male %K Middle Aged %K Motor Cortex %K Movement %X

In the first large study of its kind, we quantified changes in electrocorticographic signals associated with motor movement across 22 subjects with subdural electrode arrays placed for identification of seizure foci. Patients underwent a 5-7 d monitoring period with array placement, before seizure focus resection, and during this time they participated in the study. An interval-based motor-repetition task produced consistent and quantifiable spectral shifts that were mapped on a Talairach-standardized template cortex. Maps were created independently for a high-frequency band (HFB) (76-100 Hz) and a low-frequency band (LFB) (8-32 Hz) for several different movement modalities in each subject. The power in relevant electrodes consistently decreased in the LFB with movement, whereas the power in the HFB consistently increased. In addition, the HFB changes were more focal than the LFB changes. Sites of power changes corresponded to stereotactic locations in sensorimotor cortex and to the results of individual clinical electrical cortical mapping. Sensorimotor representation was found to be somatotopic, localized in stereotactic space to rolandic cortex, and typically followed the classic homunculus with limited extrarolandic representation.

%B J Neurosci %V 27 %P 2424-32 %8 02/2007 %G eng %U http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17329441 %N 9 %R 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3886-06.2007 %0 Journal Article %J IEEE Trans Neural Syst Rehabil Eng %D 2006 %T Electrocorticography-based brain computer interface--the Seattle experience. %A Leuthardt, E C %A Miller, John W %A Gerwin Schalk %A Rao, Rajesh P N %A Ojemann, J G %K Cerebral Cortex %K Electroencephalography %K Epilepsy %K Evoked Potentials %K Humans %K Therapy, Computer-Assisted %K User-Computer Interface %K Washington %X

Electrocorticography (ECoG) has been demonstrated to be an effective modality as a platform for brain-computer interfaces (BCIs). Through our experience with ten subjects, we further demonstrate evidence to support the power and flexibility of this signal for BCI usage. In a subset of four patients, closed-loop BCI experiments were attempted with the patient receiving online feedback that consisted of one-dimensional cursor movement controlled by ECoG features that had shown correlation with various real and imagined motor and speech tasks. All four achieved control, with final target accuracies between 73%-100%. We assess the methods for achieving control and the manner in which enhancing online control can be accomplished by rescreening during online tasks. Additionally, we assess the relevant issues of the current experimental paradigm in light of their clinical constraints.

%B IEEE Trans Neural Syst Rehabil Eng %V 14 %P 194-8 %8 06/2006 %G eng %U http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16792292 %N 2 %R 10.1109/TNSRE.2006.875536