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New brain-computer interface device gives voice to paralysedWith help of the new device, a patient with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis was able to communicate at an average rate of 62 words per minute, which is 3.4 times faster than the previous record.
PTI
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<div class="paragraphs"><p>Representative image.</p></div>

Representative image.

Credit: Pixabay Photo

Scientists have developed a device that can translate paralysed people's brain signals into words at faster speeds than before, a step towards restoring communication to people with severe paralysis.

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The brain–computer interfaces (BCIs) are capable of decoding brain activity into speech faster, more accurately and covering larger vocabulary than existing technologies, the researchers said.

People with neurological disorders, including brainstem stroke or amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, often face speech loss due to paralysis of muscles.

Previous studies have shown that it is possible to decode speech from the brain activities of a person with paralysis, but only in the form of text and with limited speed, accuracy and vocabulary.

The latest findings, published in two papers in the journal Nature, demonstrate a BCI that collects the neural activity of single cells with an array of fine electrodes inserted into the brain, and trained an artificial neural network to decode intended vocalisations.

With the help of the device, a patient with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis was able to communicate at an average rate of 62 words per minute, which is 3.4 times as fast as the previous record for a similar device and moves closer to the speed of natural conversation (around 160 words per minute).

The BCI achieved a 9.1 per cent word error rate on a 50-word vocabulary, which is 2.7 times fewer errors than the previous state-of-the-art speech BCI from 2021. A 23.8 pe cent word error rate was achieved on a 125,000-word vocabulary.

In another study, the researchers developed a BCI based on a different method for accessing brain activity, using nonpenetrating electrodes that sit on the surface of the brain and detect the activity of many cells across sites over the entire speech cortex.

This BCI decodes brain signals to generate three outputs simultaneously: text, audible speech and a speaking avatar.

The researchers trained a deep-learning model to decipher neural data collected from a patient with severe paralysis, caused by a brainstem stroke, as she attempted to silently speak full sentences.

Brain-to-text translation generated a median rate of 78 words per minute, which is 4.3 times as fast as the previous record and moves even closer to the speed of natural conversation, the researchers said.

The BCI achieved a 4.9 per cent word error rate when decoding sentences from a 50-phrase set, which is 5 times fewer errors than the previous state-of-the-art speech BCI, they said.

A 25 per cent word error rate was achieved when real-time decoding sentences with a over 1,000 word vocabulary, and offline simulations showed a 28 per cent word error rate using a vocabulary with over 39,000 words.

Brain signals were also translated directly into intelligible synthesized speech sounds which untrained listeners could understand, with a word error rate of 28 per cent for a set of 529 phrases, and personalised to the participant's pre-injury voice.

The BCI also decoded neural activity into an avatar's facial movements during speaking, as well as non-verbal expressions.

Stable, high-performance decoding was demonstrated over months, according to the researchers.

Overall, this multimodal BCI provides more possibilities for people with paralysis to communicate in a more naturalistic and expressive way, they added.

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(Published 24 August 2023, 22:58 IST)