Adaptive Neural Conditioning Using Latent Space Embeddings and Optical Data

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Abstract

Advances in brain-computer interface technology seek to enable nuanced control of neural activity patterns. This study demonstrates a framework combining artificial intelligence and high-resolution optical sensing to identify and modulate intricate signaling dynamics. Genetically-encoded calcium indicators provide fluorescent readouts of neuronal firing. An autoencoder neural network compresses these optical data into a compact latent space, extracting interpretable features. The custom software Rasa coordinates data flow, deploys the models to translate neural sequences into vector representations. By comparing embedding vectors of target and observed activity, Rasa identifies desired patterns and administers neurofeedback accordingly. Initial in vivo validation demonstrates increased activity of simple correlated firing patterns under this novel stimulation paradigm versus unmodulated recordings in rat motor cortices. While limited by experimental constraints, these preliminary results highlight the potential of integrated machine learning techniques and fine-grained optical sensing to reinforce complex behavior. Looking forward, such AI systems could unlock new therapeutic abilities to remedy dysfunctional neurological signaling underlying disease states.

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