Vaidya Mukta, Balasubramanian Karthikeyan, Southerland Joshua, Badreldin Islam, Eleryan Ahmed, Shattuck Kelsey, Gururangan Suchin, Slutzky Marc, Osborne Leslie, Fagg Andrew, Oweiss Karim, Hatsopoulos Nicholas G
Committee on Computational Neuroscience, University of Chicago , Chicago, Illinois.
Department of Neurology, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine , Chicago, Illinois.
J Neurophysiol. 2018 Apr 1;119(4):1291-1304. doi: 10.1152/jn.00982.2016. Epub 2017 Dec 13.
The development of coordinated reach-to-grasp movement has been well studied in infants and children. However, the role of motor cortex during this development is unclear because it is difficult to study in humans. We took the approach of using a brain-machine interface (BMI) paradigm in rhesus macaques with prior therapeutic amputations to examine the emergence of novel, coordinated reach to grasp. Previous research has shown that after amputation, the cortical area previously involved in the control of the lost limb undergoes reorganization, but prior BMI work has largely relied on finding neurons that already encode specific movement-related information. In this study, we taught macaques to cortically control a robotic arm and hand through operant conditioning, using neurons that were not explicitly reach or grasp related. Over the course of training, stereotypical patterns emerged and stabilized in the cross-covariance between the reaching and grasping velocity profiles, between pairs of neurons involved in controlling reach and grasp, and to a comparable, but lesser, extent between other stable neurons in the network. In fact, we found evidence of this structured coordination between pairs composed of all combinations of neurons decoding reach or grasp and other stable neurons in the network. The degree of and participation in coordination was highly correlated across all pair types. Our approach provides a unique model for studying the development of novel, coordinated reach-to-grasp movement at the behavioral and cortical levels. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Given that motor cortex undergoes reorganization after amputation, our work focuses on training nonhuman primates with chronic amputations to use neurons that are not reach or grasp related to control a robotic arm to reach to grasp through the use of operant conditioning, mimicking early development. We studied the development of a novel, coordinated behavior at the behavioral and cortical level, and the neural plasticity in M1 associated with learning to use a brain-machine interface.
婴儿和儿童的协调抓握动作发展已得到充分研究。然而,运动皮层在此发展过程中的作用尚不清楚,因为在人类中难以进行研究。我们采用了一种脑机接口(BMI)范式,对先前接受过治疗性截肢的恒河猴进行研究,以检验新颖的、协调抓握动作的出现。先前的研究表明,截肢后,先前参与控制缺失肢体的皮层区域会发生重组,但之前的BMI研究主要依赖于找到已经编码特定运动相关信息的神经元。在本研究中,我们通过操作性条件反射训练恒河猴,使其通过皮层控制机器人手臂和手,所使用的神经元并非明确与抓握或抓取相关。在训练过程中,在伸手和抓握速度曲线之间、参与控制伸手和抓握的神经元对之间的交叉协方差中,出现了刻板模式并趋于稳定,在网络中的其他稳定神经元之间也出现了类似但程度较轻的情况。事实上,我们发现了由解码伸手或抓握的神经元与网络中其他稳定神经元的所有组合构成的对之间存在这种结构化协调的证据。所有对类型的协调程度和参与度高度相关。我们的方法为在行为和皮层水平上研究新颖的、协调抓握动作的发展提供了一个独特的模型。新内容及值得注意之处鉴于截肢后运动皮层会发生重组,我们的工作重点是训练患有慢性截肢的非人类灵长类动物,利用与抓握或抓取无关的神经元,通过操作性条件反射来控制机器人手臂进行抓握,模拟早期发育。我们在行为和皮层水平上研究了一种新颖的、协调行为的发展,以及与学习使用脑机接口相关的M1区神经可塑性。