40 research outputs found

    Combined action observation and motor imagery therapy: a novel method for post-stroke motor rehabilitation

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    Cerebral vascular accidents (strokes) are a leading cause of motor deficiency in millions of people worldwide. While a complex range of biological systems is affected following a stroke, in this paper we focus primarily on impairments of the motor system and the recovery of motor skills. We briefly review research that has assessed two types of mental practice, which are currently recommended in stroke rehabilitation. Namely, action observation (AO) therapy and motor imagery (MI) training. We highlight the strengths and limitations in both techniques, before making the case for combined action observation and motor imagery (AO + MI) therapy as a potentially more effective method. This is based on a growing body of multimodal brain imaging research showing advantages for combined AO + MI instructions over the two separate methods of AO and MI. Finally, we offer a series of suggestions and considerations for how combined AO + MI therapy could be employed in neurorehabilitation

    Enhancing brain/neural-machine interfaces for upper limb motor restoration in chronic stroke and cervical spinal cord injury

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    Operation of assistive exoskeletons based on voluntary control of sensorimotor rhythms (SMR, 8-12 Hz) enables intuitive control of finger or arm movements in severe paralysis after chronic stroke or cervical spinal cord injury (SCI). To improve reliability of such systems outside the laboratory, in particular when brain activity is recorded non-invasively with scalp electroencephalography (EEG), a hybrid EEG/electrooculography (EOG) brain/neural-machine interface (B/NMI) was recently introduced. Besides providing assistance, recent studies indicate that repeated use of such systems can trigger neural recovery. However, important prerequisites have to achieved before broader use in clinical settings or everyday life environments is feasible. Current B/NMI systems predominantly restore hand function, but do not allow simultaneous control of more proximal joints for whole-arm motor coordination as required for most stroke survivors suffering from paralysis in the entire upper limb. Besides paralysis, cognitive impairments including post-stroke fatigue due to the brain lesion reduce the capacity to maintain effortful B/NMI control over a longer period of time. This impedes the applicability in daily life assistance and might even limits the efficacy of neurorehabilitation training. In contrast to stroke survivors, tetraplegics due to cervical SCI lack motor function in both hands. Given that most activities of daily living (ADL) involve bimanual manipulation, e.g., to open the lid of a bottle, bilateral exoskeleton control is required but was not shown yet in tetraplegics. To further enhance B/NMI systems, we first investigated whether B/NMI whole-arm exoskeleton control in hemiplegia after chronic stroke is feasible and safe. In contrast to simple grasping, control of more complex tasks involving the entire upper limb was not feasible with established B/NMIs because high- dimensionality of such multiple joint systems exceeds the bandwidth of these interfaces. Thus, we blended B/NMI control with vision-guidance to receive a semiautonomous whole-arm exoskeleton control. Such setup allowed to divide ADL tasks into a sequence of EEG/EOG-triggered sub-tasks reducing complexity for the user. While, for instance, a drinking task was resolved into EOG-induced reaching, lifting and placing back the cup, grasping and releasing movements were based on intuitive SMR control. Feasibility of such shared vision-guided B/NMI control was assumed when executions were initialized within 3 s (fluent control) and a minimum of 75 % of subtasks were executed within that time (reliable control). We showed feasibility in healthy subjects as well as stroke survivors without report of any side effects documenting safe use. Similarly, feasibility and safety of bilateral B/NMI control after cervical SCI was evaluated. To enable bilateral B/NMI control, established EEG-based grasping and EOG-based releasing or stop commands were complemented with a novel EOG command allowing to switch laterality by performing prolonged horizontal eye movements (>1 s) to the left or to the right. Study results with healthy subjects and tetraplegics document fluent initialization of grasping motions below 3 s as well as safe use as unintended grasping could be stopped before a full motion was conducted. Superiority of novel bilateral control was documented by a higher accuracy of up to 22 % in tetraplegics compared to a bilateral control without prolonged EOG command. Lastly, as reliable B/NMI control is cognitively demanding, e.g., by imagining or attempting the desired movements, we investigated whether heart rate variability (HRV) can be used as biomarker to predict declining control performance, which is often reported in stroke survivors due to their cognitive impairments. Referring to the close brain-heart connection, we showed in healthy subjects that a decline in HRV is specific as well as predictive to a decline in B/NMI control performance within a single training session. The predictive link was revealed by a Granger-causality analysis. In conclusion, we could demonstrate important enhancements in B/NMI control paradigms including complex whole-arm exoskeleton control as well as individual performance monitoring within a training session based on HRV. Both achievements contribute to broaden the use as a standard therapy in stroke neurorehabilitation. Especially the predictive characteristic of HRV paves the way for adaptive B/NMI control paradigms to account for individual differences among impaired stroke survivors. Moreover, we also showed feasibility and safety of a novel implementation for bilateral B/NMI control, which is necessary for reliable operation of two hand-exoskeletons for bimanual ADLs after SCI

    Decomposition and classification of electroencephalography data

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    Clinical Pathways in Stroke Rehabilitation

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    This open access book focuses on practical clinical problems that are frequently encountered in stroke rehabilitation. Consequences of diseases, e.g. impairments and activity limitations, are addressed in rehabilitation with the overall goal to reduce disability and promote participation. Based on the available best external evidence, clinical pathways are described for stroke rehabilitation bridging the gap between clinical evidence and clinical decision-making. The clinical pathways answer the questions which rehabilitation treatment options are beneficial to overcome specific impairment constellations and activity limitations and are well acceptable to stroke survivors, as well as when and in which settings to provide rehabilitation over the course of recovery post stroke. Each chapter starts with a description of the clinical problem encountered. This is followed by a systematic, but concise review of the evidence (RCTs, systematic reviews and meta-analyses) that is relevant for clinical decision-making, and comments on assessment, therapy (training, technology, medication), and the use of technical aids as appropriate. Based on these summaries, clinical algorithms / pathways are provided and the main clinical-decision situations are portrayed. The book is invaluable for all neurorehabilitation team members, clinicians, nurses, and therapists in neurology, physical medicine and rehabilitation, and related fields. It is a World Federation for NeuroRehabilitation (WFNR) educational initiative, bridging the gap between the rapidly expanding clinical research in stroke rehabilitation and clinical practice across societies and continents. It can be used for both clinical decision-making for individuals and as well as clinical background knowledge for stroke rehabilitation service development initiatives. ; Provides evidence-based clinical practice guidelines for stroke rehabilitation Discusses clinical problems and evidence, comments on assessment, therapy and technical aids Written by experienced experts with a background in clinical practic

    Augmentation of Brain Function: Facts, Fiction and Controversy. Volume III: From Clinical Applications to Ethical Issues and Futuristic Ideas

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    The final volume in this tripartite series on Brain Augmentation is entitled “From Clinical Applications to Ethical Issues and Futuristic Ideas”. Many of the articles within this volume deal with translational efforts taking the results of experiments on laboratory animals and applying them to humans. In many cases, these interventions are intended to help people with disabilities in such a way so as to either restore or extend brain function. Traditionally, therapies in brain augmentation have included electrical and pharmacological techniques. In contrast, some of the techniques discussed in this volume add specificity by targeting select neural populations. This approach opens the door to where and how to promote the best interventions. Along the way, results have empowered the medical profession by expanding their understanding of brain function. Articles in this volume relate novel clinical solutions for a host of neurological and psychiatric conditions such as stroke, Parkinson’s disease, Huntington’s disease, epilepsy, dementia, Alzheimer’s disease, autism spectrum disorders (ASD), traumatic brain injury, and disorders of consciousness. In disease, symptoms and signs denote a departure from normal function. Brain augmentation has now been used to target both the core symptoms that provide specificity in the diagnosis of a disease, as well as other constitutional symptoms that may greatly handicap the individual. The volume provides a report on the use of repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) in ASD with reported improvements of core deficits (i.e., executive functions). TMS in this regard departs from the present-day trend towards symptomatic treatment that leaves unaltered the root cause of the condition. In diseases, such as schizophrenia, brain augmentation approaches hold promise to avoid lengthy pharmacological interventions that are usually riddled with side effects or those with limiting returns as in the case of Parkinson’s disease. Brain stimulation can also be used to treat auditory verbal hallucination, visuospatial (hemispatial) neglect, and pain in patients suffering from multiple sclerosis. The brain acts as a telecommunication transceiver wherein different bandwidth of frequencies (brainwave oscillations) transmit information. Their baseline levels correlate with certain behavioral states. The proper integration of brain oscillations provides for the phenomenon of binding and central coherence. Brain augmentation may foster the normalization of brain oscillations in nervous system disorders. These techniques hold the promise of being applied remotely (under the supervision of medical personnel), thus overcoming the obstacle of travel in order to obtain healthcare. At present, traditional thinking would argue the possibility of synergism among different modalities of brain augmentation as a way of increasing their overall effectiveness and improving therapeutic selectivity. Thinking outside of the box would also provide for the implementation of brain-to-brain interfaces where techniques, proper to artificial intelligence, could allow us to surpass the limits of natural selection or enable communications between several individual brains sharing memories, or even a global brain capable of self-organization. Not all brains are created equal. Brain stimulation studies suggest large individual variability in response that may affect overall recovery/treatment, or modify desired effects of a given intervention. The subject’s age, gender, hormonal levels may affect an individual’s cortical excitability. In addition, this volume discusses the role of social interactions in the operations of augmenting technologies. Finally, augmenting methods could be applied to modulate consciousness, even though its neural mechanisms are poorly understood. Finally, this volume should be taken as a debate on social, moral and ethical issues on neurotechnologies. Brain enhancement may transform the individual into someone or something else. These techniques bypass the usual routes of accommodation to environmental exigencies that exalted our personal fortitude: learning, exercising, and diet. This will allow humans to preselect desired characteristics and realize consequent rewards without having to overcome adversity through more laborious means. The concern is that humans may be playing God, and the possibility of an expanding gap in social equity where brain enhancements may be selectively available to the wealthier individuals. These issues are discussed by a number of articles in this volume. Also discussed are the relationship between the diminishment and enhancement following the application of brain-augmenting technologies, the problem of “mind control” with BMI technologies, free will the duty to use cognitive enhancers in high-responsibility professions, determining the population of people in need of brain enhancement, informed public policy, cognitive biases, and the hype caused by the development of brain- augmenting approaches

    The Hippocampus as a Cognitive Map

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    Clinical Pathways in Stroke Rehabilitation

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    This open access book focuses on practical clinical problems that are frequently encountered in stroke rehabilitation. Consequences of diseases, e.g. impairments and activity limitations, are addressed in rehabilitation with the overall goal to reduce disability and promote participation. Based on the available best external evidence, clinical pathways are described for stroke rehabilitation bridging the gap between clinical evidence and clinical decision-making. The clinical pathways answer the questions which rehabilitation treatment options are beneficial to overcome specific impairment constellations and activity limitations and are well acceptable to stroke survivors, as well as when and in which settings to provide rehabilitation over the course of recovery post stroke. Each chapter starts with a description of the clinical problem encountered. This is followed by a systematic, but concise review of the evidence (RCTs, systematic reviews and meta-analyses) that is relevant for clinical decision-making, and comments on assessment, therapy (training, technology, medication), and the use of technical aids as appropriate. Based on these summaries, clinical algorithms / pathways are provided and the main clinical-decision situations are portrayed. The book is invaluable for all neurorehabilitation team members, clinicians, nurses, and therapists in neurology, physical medicine and rehabilitation, and related fields. It is a World Federation for NeuroRehabilitation (WFNR) educational initiative, bridging the gap between the rapidly expanding clinical research in stroke rehabilitation and clinical practice across societies and continents. It can be used for both clinical decision-making for individuals and as well as clinical background knowledge for stroke rehabilitation service development initiatives. ; Provides evidence-based clinical practice guidelines for stroke rehabilitation Discusses clinical problems and evidence, comments on assessment, therapy and technical aids Written by experienced experts with a background in clinical practic

    Collaborative Brain-Computer Interfaces in Rapid Image Presentation and Motion Pictures

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    The last few years have seen an increase in brain-computer interface (BCI) research for the able-bodied population. One of these new branches involves collaborative BCIs (cBCIs), in which information from several users is combined to improve the performance of a BCI system. This thesis is focused on cBCIs with the aim of increasing understanding of how they can be used to improve performance of single-user BCIs based on event-related potentials (ERPs). The objectives are: (1) to study and compare different methods of creating groups using exclusively electroencephalography (EEG) signals, (2) to develop a theoretical model to establish where the highest gains may be expected from creating groups, and (3) to analyse the information that can be extracted by merging signals from multiple users. For this, two scenarios involving real-world stimuli (images presented at high rates and movies) were studied. The first scenario consisted of a visual search task in which images were presented at high frequencies. Three modes of combining EEG recordings from different users were tested to improve the detection of different ERPs, namely the P300 (associated with the presence of events of interest) and the N2pc (associated with shifts of attention). We showed that the detection and localisation of targets can improve significantly when information from multiple viewers is combined. In the second scenario, feature movies were introduced to study variations in ERPs in response to cuts through cBCI techniques. A distinct, previously unreported, ERP appears in relation to such cuts, the amplitude of which is not modulated by visual effects such as the low-level properties of the frames surrounding the discontinuity. However, significant variations that depended on the movie were found. We hypothesise that these techniques can be used to build on the attentional theory of cinematic continuity by providing an extra source of information: the brain

    Cognitive Biology: Dealing with Information from Bacteria to Minds

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    Providing a new conceptual scaffold for further research in biology and cognition, this text introduces the new field of cognitive biology, treating developing organisms as information processors which use cognition to control and modify their environments
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