Title :
Feature extraction and unsupervised classification of neural population reward signals for reinforcement based BMI
Author :
Prins, Noeline W. ; Shijia Geng ; Pohlmeyer, E.A. ; Mahmoudi, B. ; Sanchez, J.C.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Biomed. Eng., Univ. of Miami, Coral Gables, FL, USA
Abstract :
New reinforcement based paradigms for building adaptive decoders for Brain-Machine Interfaces involve using feedback directly from the brain. In this work, we investigated neuromodulation in the Nucleus Accumbens (reward center) during a multi-target reaching task and investigated how to extract a reinforcing or non-reinforcing signal that could be used to adapt a BMI decoder. One of the challenges in brain-driven adaptation is how to translate biological neuromodulation into a single binary signal from the distributed representation of the neural population, which may encode many aspects of reward. To extract these signals, feature analysis and clustering were used to identify timing and coding properties of a user´s neuromodulation related to reward perception. First, Principal Component Analysis (PCA) of reward related neural signals was used to extract variance in the firing and the optimum time correlation between the neural signal and the reward phase of the task. Next, k-means clustering was used to separate data into two classes.
Keywords :
biomimetics; brain-computer interfaces; decoding; feature extraction; feedback; medical signal processing; neurophysiology; pattern clustering; principal component analysis; signal classification; BMI decoder; PCA; adaptive decoder; biological neuromodulation; brain feedback; brain-driven adaptation; brain-machine interface; clustering method; coding properties; data classification; feature analysis; feature extraction; firing time correlation; k-means clustering; multitarget reaching task; neural population distributed representation; neural population reward signal; nonreinforcing signal extraction; nucleus accumbens; optimum time correlation; principal component analysis; reinforcement based BMI; reinforcement based paradigm; reward center; reward perception; reward related neural signal; single binary signal; task reward phase; timing identification; unsupervised classification; user neuromodulation; variance extraction; Animals; Decoding; Feature extraction; Principal component analysis; Robot sensing systems; Standards;
Conference_Titel :
Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society (EMBC), 2013 35th Annual International Conference of the IEEE
Conference_Location :
Osaka
DOI :
10.1109/EMBC.2013.6610733