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  Sensorimotor brain-computer interface performance depends on signal-to-noise ratio but not connectivity of the mu rhythm in a multiverse analysis of longitudinal data

Kapralov, N., Jamshidi Idaji, M., Stephani, T., Studenova, A., Vidaurre, C., Ros, T., et al. (2023). Sensorimotor brain-computer interface performance depends on signal-to-noise ratio but not connectivity of the mu rhythm in a multiverse analysis of longitudinal data. bioRxiv. doi:10.1101/2023.09.30.558407.

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Kapralov, Nikolai1, Author           
Jamshidi Idaji, Mina1, Author                 
Stephani, Tilman1, Author                 
Studenova, Alina1, Author           
Vidaurre, Carmen, Author
Ros, Tomas, Author
Villringer, Arno1, Author                 
Nikulin, Vadim V.1, Author                 
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1Department Neurology, MPI for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, Max Planck Society, ou_634549              

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 Abstract: Serving as a channel for communication with locked-in patients or control of prostheses, sensorimotor brain-computer interfaces (BCIs) decode imaginary movements from the recorded activity of the user’s brain. However, many individuals remain unable to control the BCI, and the underlying mechanisms are not clear yet. The user’s BCI performance was previously shown to correlate with the resting-state signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of the mu rhythm and the phase synchronization (PS) of the mu rhythm between sensorimotor areas. Yet, these predictors of performance were primarily evaluated in a single BCI session, while the longitudinal aspect remains rather uninvestigated. In addition, different analysis pipelines were used for the estimation of PS in source space, potentially hindering the reproducibility of the results. To systematically address these issues, we performed an extensive validation of the relationship between pre-stimulus SNR, PS, and session-wise BCI performance using a publicly available dataset of 62 human participants performing up to 11 sessions of BCI training. We combined 24 pipelines for source space analysis and three PS measures in a multiverse analysis to investigate how robust the observed effects were to the selection of the pipeline. Our results show that SNR had a between- and within-subject effect on BCI performance for the majority of the pipelines. In contrast, the effect of phase synchronization on BCI performance was less robust to the selection of the pipeline and became non-significant after controlling for SNR. Taken together, our results demonstrate that changes in neuronal connectivity within the sensorimotor system are not critical for learning to control a BCI, and interventions that increase the SNR of the mu rhythm might lead to improvements in the user’s BCI performance.

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Language(s): eng - English
 Dates: 2023-10-02
 Publication Status: Published online
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 Identifiers: DOI: 10.1101/2023.09.30.558407
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Title: bioRxiv
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