Title :
Conveying Tactile Feedback in Sensorized Hand Neuroprostheses Using a Biofidelic Model of Mechanotransduction
Author :
Sung Soo Kim ; Sripati, A.P. ; Vogelstein, R. Jacob ; Armiger, R.S. ; Russell, A.F. ; Bensmaia, S.J.
Author_Institution :
Krieger Mind/Brain Inst., Johns Hopkins Univ., Baltimore, MD, USA
Abstract :
One approach to conveying tactile feedback from sensorized neural prostheses is to characterize the neural signals that would normally be produced in an intact limb and reproduce them through electrical stimulation of the residual peripheral nerves. Toward this end, we have developed a model that accurately replicates the neural activity evoked by any dynamic stimulus in the three types of mechanoreceptive afferents that innervate the glabrous skin of the hand. The model takes as input the position of the stimulus as a function of time, along with its first (velocity), second (acceleration), and third (jerk) derivatives. This input is filtered and passed through an integrate-and-fire mechanism to generate a train of spikes as output. The major conclusion of this study is that the timing of individual spikes evoked in mechanoreceptive fibers innervating the hand can be accurately predicted by this model. We discuss how this model can be integrated in a sensorized prosthesis and show that the activity in a population of simulated afferents conveys information about the location, timing, and magnitude of contact between the hand and an object.
Keywords :
bioelectric potentials; feedback; neurophysiology; prosthetics; skin; touch (physiological); dynamic stimulus evoked neural activity; hand glabrous skin; integrate and fire mechanism; mechanoreceptive afferent; mechanotransduction model; residual peripheral nerve electrical stimulation; sensorised hand neuroprosthesis; spike train output; stimulus position; tactile feedback; Electrical stimulation; Laboratories; Nerve fibers; Neural prosthesis; Neurofeedback; Physics; Prosthetics; Signal design; Skin; Timing; Electrical stimulation; mechanoreceptive afferents; model; neuroprostheses; peripheral nerve; simulation; tactile feedback;
Journal_Title :
Biomedical Circuits and Systems, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TBCAS.2009.2032396