4.6 Article

Signal recovery from stimulation artifacts in intracranial recordings with dictionary learning

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEURAL ENGINEERING
Volume 17, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1741-2552/ab7a4f

Keywords

electrophysiology; stimulation; artifact; neural signals

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation (NSF) Center for Neurotechnology (CNT) [EEC-1028725]
  2. NSF [IIS-1514790, DGE-1256082, 2K12HD001097]
  3. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [NS065186]
  4. NIH [NS079200]
  5. Swedish Research Council
  6. James McDonnell Foundation
  7. Torsten Soderbergs Stiftelse
  8. Promobilia Foundation
  9. Swedish Society for Medical Research
  10. Swedish Society of Medicine
  11. Big Data for Genomics and Neuroscience Training Grant [1T32CA206089]
  12. UW Institute for Neuroengineering
  13. Washington Research Foundation Funds for Innovation in Neuroengineering
  14. CJ and Elizabeth Hwang Endowed Professorship for Computer Science and Engineering and Electrical and Computer Engineering
  15. Washington Research Foundation
  16. Alfred P Sloan foundation
  17. Riksbanken Jubileumsfond
  18. Stockholm Brain Institute

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Objective. Electrical stimulation of the human brain is commonly used for eliciting and inhibiting neural activity for clinical diagnostics, modifying abnormal neural circuit function for therapeutics, and interrogating cortical connectivity. However, recording electrical signals with concurrent stimulation results in dominant electrical artifacts that mask the neural signals of interest. Here we develop a method to reproducibly and robustly recover neural activity during concurrent stimulation. We concentrate on signal recovery across an array of electrodes without channel-wise fine-tuning of the algorithm. Our goal includes signal recovery with trains of stimulation pulses, since repeated, high-frequency pulses are often required to induce desired effects in both therapeutic and research domains. We have made all of our code and data publicly available. Approach. We developed an algorithm that automatically detects templates of artifacts across many channels of recording, creating a dictionary of learned templates using unsupervised clustering. The artifact template that best matches each individual artifact pulse is subtracted to recover the underlying activity. To assess the success of our method, we focus on whether it extracts physiologically interpretable signals from real recordings. Main results. We demonstrate our signal recovery approach on invasive electrophysiologic recordings from human subjects during stimulation. We show the recovery of meaningful neural signatures in both electrocorticographic (ECoG) arrays and deep brain stimulation (DBS) recordings. In addition, we compared cortical responses induced by the stimulation of primary somatosensory (S1) by natural peripheral touch, as well as motor cortex activity with and without concurrent S1 stimulation. Significance. Our work will enable future advances in neural engineering with simultaneous stimulation and recording.

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