Real-time synthesis of imagined speech processes from minimally invasive recordings of neural activity
FEEDBACK
Neural Prostheses
QH301-705.5
GAMMA ACTIVITY
SPOKEN
Article
Electrodes, Implanted
Young Adult
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
Brain-Computer Interfaces
Quality of Life
Humans
Speech
Female
BRAIN-COMPUTER INTERFACE
Biology (General)
DOI:
10.1038/s42003-021-02578-0
Publication Date:
2021-09-23T16:43:47Z
AUTHORS (13)
ABSTRACT
AbstractSpeech neuroprosthetics aim to provide a natural communication channel to individuals who are unable to speak due to physical or neurological impairments. Real-time synthesis of acoustic speech directly from measured neural activity could enable natural conversations and notably improve quality of life, particularly for individuals who have severely limited means of communication. Recent advances in decoding approaches have led to high quality reconstructions of acoustic speech from invasively measured neural activity. However, most prior research utilizes data collected during open-loop experiments of articulated speech, which might not directly translate to imagined speech processes. Here, we present an approach that synthesizes audible speech in real-time for both imagined and whispered speech conditions. Using a participant implanted with stereotactic depth electrodes, we were able to reliably generate audible speech in real-time. The decoding models rely predominately on frontal activity suggesting that speech processes have similar representations when vocalized, whispered, or imagined. While reconstructed audio is not yet intelligible, our real-time synthesis approach represents an essential step towards investigating how patients will learn to operate a closed-loop speech neuroprosthesis based on imagined speech.
SUPPLEMENTAL MATERIAL
Coming soon ....
REFERENCES (56)
CITATIONS (72)
EXTERNAL LINKS
PlumX Metrics
RECOMMENDATIONS
FAIR ASSESSMENT
Coming soon ....
JUPYTER LAB
Coming soon ....