Unsupervised Channel Compression Methods in Motor Prostheses Design

Published: 01 Jan 2021, Last Modified: 15 May 2025EMBC 2021EveryoneRevisionsBibTeXCC BY-SA 4.0
Abstract: The development of high performance brain machine interfaces (BMIs) requires scaling recording channel count to enable simultaneous recording from large populations of neurons. Unfortunately, proposed implantable neural interfaces have power requirements that scale linearly with channel count. To facilitate the design of interfaces with reduced power requirements, we propose and evaluate an unsupervised-learning-based compressed sensing strategy. This strategy suggests novel neural interface architectures which compress neural data by methodically combining channels of spiking activity. We develop an entropy-based compression strategy that models the population of neurons as being generated from a lower dimensional set of latent variables and aims to minimize the loss of information in the latent variables due to compression. We evaluate compressed features by inferring the latent variables from these features and measuring the accuracy with which the activity of held out neurons and arm movements can be estimated. We apply these methods to different cortical regions (PMd and M1) and compare the proposed compression methods to a random projections strategy often employed for compressed sensing and to a supervised regression based channel dropping strategy traditionally applied in BMI applications.
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