Abstract

Cortical stimulation via electrocorticography (ECoG) may be an effective method for inducing artificial sensation in bi-directional brain-computer interfaces (BD-BCIs). However, strong electrical artifacts caused by electrostimulation may significantly degrade or obscure neural information. A detailed understanding of stimulation artifact propagation through relevant tissues may improve existing artifact suppression techniques or inspire the development of novel artifact mitigation strategies. Our work thus seeks to comprehensively characterize and model the propagation of artifacts in subdural ECoG stimulation. To this end, we collected and analyzed data from eloquent cortex mapping procedures of four subjects with epilepsy who were implanted with subdural ECoG electrodes. From this data, we observed that artifacts exhibited phase-locking and ratcheting characteristics in the time domain across all subjects. In the frequency domain, stimulation caused broadband power increases, as well as power bursts at the fundamental stimulation frequency and its super-harmonics. The spatial distribution of artifacts followed the potential distribution of an electric dipole with a median goodness-of-fit of R2 = 0.80 across all subjects and stimulation channels. Artifacts as large as ±1,100 μV appeared anywhere from 4.43 to 38.34 mm from the stimulation channel. These temporal, spectral and spatial characteristics can be utilized to improve existing artifact suppression techniques, inspire new strategies for artifact mitigation, and aid in the development of novel cortical stimulation protocols. Taken together, these findings deepen our understanding of cortical electrostimulation and provide critical design specifications for future BD-BCI systems.

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