AI Article Synopsis

  • Recent studies suggest that brain networks play a crucial role in controlling human walking, as evidenced by the use of electroencephalogram (EEG) to predict gait patterns with high accuracy.
  • Researchers aim to develop non-invasive brain-machine-interface systems to help restore or enhance walking abilities, which is vital for rehabilitation.
  • The new research protocol captures EEG, muscle activity (EMG), and body movements during both treadmill and overground walking, providing insights into the effectiveness of decoding walking patterns in everyday environments.

Article Abstract

Recent studies support the involvement of supraspinal networks in control of bipedal human walking. Part of this evidence encompasses studies, including our previous work, demonstrating that gait kinematics and limb coordination during treadmill walking can be inferred from the scalp electroencephalogram (EEG) with reasonably high decoding accuracies. These results provide impetus for development of non-invasive brain-machine-interface (BMI) systems for use in restoration and/or augmentation of gait- a primary goal of rehabilitation research. To date, studies examining EEG decoding of activity during gait have been limited to treadmill walking in a controlled environment. However, to be practically viable a BMI system must be applicable for use in everyday locomotor tasks such as over ground walking and turning. Here, we present a novel protocol for non-invasive collection of brain activity (EEG), muscle activity (electromyography (EMG)), and whole-body kinematic data (head, torso, and limb trajectories) during both treadmill and over ground walking tasks. By collecting these data in the uncontrolled environment insight can be gained regarding the feasibility of decoding unconstrained gait and surface EMG from scalp EEG.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3846438PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3791/50602DOI Listing

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