Optimal positioning and size of high-density electrocorticography grids for speech brain-computer interfaces

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Abstract

Speech-based brain-computer interfaces (BCIs) can offer an intuitive means of communication for those who have lost the ability to speak due to paralysis. Significant progress has been made in classifying individual words from high numbers of electrocorticographic (ECoG) electrodes on the sensorimotor cortex (SMC). As implantations of larger grids with more ECoG electrodes are associated with higher surgical risk, we here examined whether confined electrode configurations can match the classification accuracy of larger grids. To this end, we analyzed data from eight able-bodied participants with high-density ECoG grids (64 to 128 electrodes) who performed a task that involved speaking 12 Dutch words. Word pronunciation was associated with changes in high frequency band activity in two SMC foci, one in the ventral SMC and another in the dorsal SMC. Using a combinatorics approach, we found that a smaller, rectangular, configuration with a surface area of 325 mm 2 to 561 mm 2 (32 electrodes) could achieve a word classification accuracy similar to that of the larger grids: 76±16% versus 75±17% across participants, respectively (practical chance level 16.7%). The best configurations were oriented vertically and centered on the central sulcus. These findings indicate that a 32-electrode ECoG grid placed optimally can be sufficient for achieving high word classification accuracy on a closed set of words. We conclude that targeted placement of small ECoG grids can reduce surgical demands on end users and justify energy- and complexity-efficient designs of fully implantable BCI devices for individuals with severe paralysis.

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