Getting a grip on grasping: Scientists from Freiburg decipher brain commands for different grasp types
In the current issue of the journal “NeuroImage”, Tobias Pistohl and colleagues from the Bernstein Center Freiburg and the University Medical Centre describe how they succeeded in differentiating the brain activity associated with a precise grip and a grip of the whole hand. Ultimately, the scientists aim to develop a neuroprosthesis: a device that receives commands directly from the brain, and which can be used by paralysed people to control the arm of a robot – or even their own limbs.
One big problem about arm movements had been so far unresolved. In our daily lives, it is important to handle different objects in different ways, for example a feather and a brick. The researchers from Freiburg now found aspects in the brain’s activity that distinguish a precise grip from one with the whole hand.
To this end, Pistohl and his collaborators made use of signals that are measured on the surface of the brain. The big advantage of this approach is that no electrodes have to be implanted directly into this delicate organ. At the same time, the obtained signals are much more precise than those that can be measured on the skull’s surface.
The scientists conducted a simple experiment with patients that were not paralysed, but had electrodes implanted into their skull for medical reasons. The task was to grab a cup, either with a precise grip formed by the thumb and the index finger, or with their whole hand. At the same time, a computer recorded the electrical changes at the electrodes. And in fact, the scientists were able to find signals in the brain’s activity that differed, depending on the type of grasp. A computer was able to attribute these signals to the different hand positions with great reliability. Now, the next challenge will be to identify these kinds of signals in paralysed patients as well – with the aim of eventually putting a more independent life back within their reach.
Image Caption
In the brain region responsible for movement (green), the precise grasp (blue mug and curve) is associated with a signal that is distinctly different from the signal of a whole-hand grasp (red).
Full article (subscription required)
Pistohl, T., Schulze-Bonhage, A., Aertsen, A., Mehring, C. and Ball, T. (2011) Decoding natural grasp types from human ECoG, NeuroImage, doi:10.1016/j.neuroimage.2011.06.084
Press release by the University of Freiburg (in German)