A sliced inverse regression (SIR) decoding the forelimb movement from neuronal spikes in the rat motor cortex

Shih Hung Yang, You-Yin Chen, Sheng Huang Lin, Lun De Liao, Horng-Shing Lu, Ching-Fu Wang, Po Chuan Chen, Yu Chun Lo, Thanh Dat Phan, Hsiang Ya Chao, Hui-Ching Lin, Hsin Yi Lai*, Wei-Chen Huang

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

3 Scopus citations

Abstract

Several neural decoding algorithms have successfully converted brain signals into commands to control a computer cursor and prosthetic devices. A majority of decoding methods, such as population vector algorithms (PVA), optimal linear estimators (OLE), and neural networks (NN), are effective in predicting movement kinematics, including movement direction, speed and trajectory but usually require a large number of neurons to achieve desirable performance. This study proposed a novel decoding algorithm even with signals obtained from a smaller numbers of neurons. We adopted sliced inverse regression (SIR) to predict forelimb movement from single-unit activities recorded in the rat primary motor (M1) cortex in a water-reward lever-pressing task. SIR performed weighted principal component analysis (PCA) to achieve effective dimension reduction for nonlinear regression. To demonstrate the decoding performance, SIR was compared to PVA, OLE, and NN. Furthermore, PCA and sequential feature selection (SFS) which are popular feature selection techniques were implemented for comparison of feature selection effectiveness. Among SIR, PVA, OLE, PCA, SFS, and NN decoding methods, the trajectories predicted by SIR (with a root mean square error, RMSE, of 8.47 ± 1.32 mm) was closer to the actual trajectories compared with those predicted by PVA (30.41 ± 11.73 mm), OLE (20.17 ± 6.43 mm), PCA (19.13 ± 0.75 mm), SFS (22.75 ± 2.01 mm), and NN (16.75 ± 2.02 mm). The superiority of SIR was most obvious when the sample size of neurons was small. We concluded that SIR sorted the input data to obtain the effective transform matrices for movement prediction, making it a robust decoding method for conditions with sparse neuronal information.

Original languageEnglish
Article number556
JournalFrontiers in Neuroscience
Volume10
Issue numberDEC
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2016

Keywords

  • Forelimb movement prediction
  • Neural decoding
  • Neural networks (NN)
  • Principle component analysis (PCA)
  • Sliced inverse regression (SIR)

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