High-gamma electrocorticography activity represents perceived vibration intensity in human somatosensory cortex

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Abstract

Haptic feedback can play a useful role in rehabilitation and brain-computer interface applications by providing users with information about their system or performance. One challenge delivering tactile stimulation is not knowing how the haptic sensation is actually perceived, irrespective of the stimulation amplitude, during real-world use and beyond controlled psychophysical experiments. In a participant with chronically implanted electrocorticography arrays, we observed that perceived intensity of haptic vibration on the fingertips was represented in the high-gamma (HG) frequency band (70-170 Hz) in the somatosensory cortex. The five fingers of the participant’s right hand were represented by distinct channels in the implanted array and modulated by the vibration amplitude at the fingertips. Although it reliably varied with the vibration amplitude, we found that HG activity had a stronger relationship with the actual perceived intensity of haptic stimulation ( r s = 0.45 , p < 10 −6 ). These results demonstrate that neural signals, specifically HG activity, in the somatosensory cortex can represent qualities of perceived haptic intensity regardless of the stimulation amplitude, which could enable a new way to passively quantify or ensure effective haptic feedback to a user.

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