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An Accurate and Rapidly Calibrating Speech Neuroprosthesis
Medicine and HealthThe New England Journal of Medicine

An Accurate and Rapidly Calibrating Speech Neuroprosthesis

N. S. Card, M. Wairagkar, et al.

An intracortical speech neuroprosthesis enabled a man with ALS and severe dysarthria to produce rapid, accurate conversational text and personalized synthesized speech after brief training—reaching 99.6% accuracy on day 1 and sustaining ~97.5% accuracy over 8.4 months at about 32 words per minute. Research conducted by Nicholas S. Card, Maitreyee Wairagkar, Carrina Iacobacci, Xianda Hou, Tyler Singer-Clark, Francis R. Willett, Erin M. Kunz, Chaofei Fan, Maryam Vahdati Nia, Darrel R. Deo, Aparna Srinivasan, Eun Young Choi, Matthew F. Glasser, Leigh R. Hochberg, Jaimie M. Henderson, Kiarash Shahlaie, Sergey D. Stavisky, and David M. Brandman.... show more
Abstract
BACKGROUND Brain-computer interfaces can enable communication for people with paralysis by transforming cortical activity associated with attempted speech into text on a computer screen. Communication with brain-computer interfaces has been restricted by extensive training requirements and limited accuracy. METHODS A 45-year-old man with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) with tetraparesis and severe dysarthria underwent surgical implantation of four microelectrode arrays into his left ventral precentral gyrus 5 years after the onset of the illness; these arrays recorded neural activity from 256 intracortical electrodes. We report the results of decoding his cortical neural activity as he attempted to speak in both prompted and unstructured conversational contexts. Decoded words were displayed on a screen and then vocalized with the use of text-to-speech software designed to sound like his pre-ALS voice. RESULTS On the first day of use (25 days after surgery), the neuroprosthesis achieved 99.6% accuracy with a 50-word vocabulary. Calibration of the neuroprosthesis required 30 minutes of cortical recordings while the participant attempted to speak, followed by subsequent processing. On the second day, after 1.4 additional hours of system training, the neuroprosthesis achieved 90.2% accuracy using a 125,000-word vocabulary. With further training data, the neuroprosthesis sustained 97.5% accuracy over a period of 8.4 months after surgical implantation, and the participant used it to communicate in self-paced conversations at a rate of approximately 32 words per minute for more than 248 cumulative hours. CONCLUSIONS In a person with ALS and severe dysarthria, an intracortical speech neuroprosthesis reached a level of performance suitable to restore conversational communication after brief training.
Publisher
The New England Journal of Medicine
Published On
Aug 15, 2024
Authors
Nicholas S. Card, Maitreyee Wairagkar, Carrina Iacobacci, Xianda Hou, Tyler Singer-Clark, Francis R. Willett, Erin M. Kunz, Chaofei Fan, Maryam Vahdati Nia, Darrel R. Deo, Aparna Srinivasan, Eun Young Choi, Matthew F. Glasser, Leigh R. Hochberg, Jaimie M. Henderson, Kiarash Shahlaie, Sergey D. Stavisky, David M. Brandman
Tags
intracortical speech neuroprosthesisbrain–computer interfaceattempted speech decodingamyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS)real-time neural decodingmicroelectrode arraysconversational communication
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