Kernel Reinforcement Learning-Assisted Adaptive Decoder Facilitates Stable and Continuous Brain Control Tasks

Brain-Machine Interfaces (BMIs) assist paralyzed people to brain control (BC) the neuro-prosthesis continuously moving in space. During the BC process, the subject imagines the movement of the real limb and adapts the brain activity according to the sensory feedback. The neural adaptation in the closed-loop control results in complex and changing brain signals. Simultaneously, the decoder interprets the time-varying functional mapping between neural activity and continuous trajectory. It is crucial and challenging to accurately and adaptively track the mapping to help the subject accomplish the BC task with a stable performance. Existing Kalman Filter (KF) based decoders achieve continuous trajectory control by linearly interpreting neural firing observations into self-evolving prosthetic states. However, the linear neural-state mapping might not accurately reflect the movement intention of the subject. In this paper, we propose a novel method that allows subjects to achieve continuous brain control efficiently and stably. The proposed method incorporates a kernel reinforcement learning method into a state-observation model to decode the nonlinearly neural observation into a continuous trajectory state. The state transition function ensures the continuity of the prosthetic state. The kernel reinforcement learning allows the quick adaptation of the nonlinear neural-movement mapping during the BC process. The proposed method is tested in an online brain control reaching task fo...
Source: IEE Transactions on Neural Systems and Rehabilitation Engineering - Category: Neuroscience Source Type: research