Title :
Haptic fMRI: Accurately estimating neural responses in motor, pre-motor, and somatosensory cortex during complex motor tasks
Author :
Menon, Samir ; Yu, Min-Chieh ; Kay, Kendrick ; Khatib, Oussama
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Stanford Univ., Stanford, CA, USA
Abstract :
Haptics combined with functional magnetic resonance imaging (Haptic fMRI) can non-invasively study how the human brain coordinates movement during complex manipulation tasks, yet avoiding associated fMRI artifacts remains a challenge. Here, we demonstrate confound-free neural activation measurements using Haptic fMRI for an unconstrained three degree-of-freedom motor task that involves planning, reaching, and visually guided trajectory tracking. Our haptic interface tracked subjects´ hand motions, velocities, and accelerations (sample-rate, 350Hz), and provided continuous realtime visual feedback. During fMRI acquisition, we achieved uniform response latencies (reaching, 0.7-1.1s; tracking, 0.4-0.65s); minimized hand jitter (<;8mm); and ensured reliable motion trajectories (tracking, <;7mm root-mean-square error). In addition, our protocol decorrelated head motion from both hand speed (r=-0.03) and acceleration (r=-0.025), which reliably produced low head motion levels (<;0.4mm/s between scan volumes) and a low fMRI temporal noise-to-signal ratio (<;1%) across thirty-five scan runs. Our results address the primary outstanding Haptic fMRI confounds: motion induced low spatial-frequency magnetic field changes, which correlate neural activation across cortex; unreliable motions and response latencies, which reduce statistical power; and task-correlated head motion, which causes spurious fMRI activation. Haptic fMRI can thus reliably elicit and localize heterogeneous neural activation for different tasks in motor (movement), pre-motor (planning), and somatosensory (limb displacement) cortex, demonstrating that it is feasible to use the technique to study how the brain achieves three dimensional motor control.
Keywords :
biomechanics; biomedical MRI; brain; feedback; haptic interfaces; mean square error methods; minimisation; neurophysiology; noise; somatosensory phenomena; confound-free neural activation measurements; continuous real-time visual feedback; hand jitter minimization; haptic fMRI temporal noise-to-signal ratio; haptic functional magnetic resonance imaging; haptic interface; head motion trajectories; human brain coordinate movement; limb displacement; neural response estimation; premotor cortex; root-mean-square error; somatosensory cortex; task-correlated head motion; three dimensional motor control; unconstrained three degree-of-freedom motor task; Haptic interfaces; Magnetic heads; Magnetic resonance imaging; Protocols; Reliability; Tracking; Trajectory;
Conference_Titel :
Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society (EMBC), 2014 36th Annual International Conference of the IEEE
Conference_Location :
Chicago, IL
DOI :
10.1109/EMBC.2014.6944017