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research article

Sense of agency for intracortical brain-machine interfaces

Serino, Andrea  
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Bockbrader, Marcia
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Bertoni, Tommaso
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January 19, 2022
Nature Human Behaviour

Intracortical brain-machine interfaces decode motor commands from neural signals and translate them into actions, enabling movement for paralysed individuals. The subjective sense of agency associated with actions generated via intracortical brain-machine interfaces, the neural mechanisms involved and its clinical relevance are currently unknown. By experimentally manipulating the coherence between decoded motor commands and sensory feedback in a tetraplegic individual using a brain-machine interface, we provide evidence that primary motor cortex processes sensory feedback, sensorimotor conflicts and subjective states of actions generated via the brain-machine interface. Neural signals processing the sense of agency affected the proficiency of the brain-machine interface, underlining the clinical potential of the present approach. These findings show that primary motor cortex encodes information related to action and sensing, but also sensorimotor and subjective agency signals, which in turn are relevant for clinical applications of brain-machine interfaces.

Serino et al. studied the sense of agency for actions generated via a brain-machine interface. They show that primary motor cortex encodes not only motor and sensory signals, but also subjective agency signals, enabling improved brain-machine interface proficiency.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1038/s41562-021-01233-2
Web of Science ID

WOS:000744369400001

Author(s)
Serino, Andrea  
Bockbrader, Marcia
Bertoni, Tommaso
Colachis, Sam
Solca, Marco  
Dunlap, Collin
Eipel, Kaitie
Ganzer, Patrick
Annetta, Nick
Sharma, Gaurav
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Date Issued

2022-01-19

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO

Published in
Nature Human Behaviour
Subjects

Psychology, Biological

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Multidisciplinary Sciences

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Neurosciences

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Psychology, Experimental

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Psychology

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Science & Technology - Other Topics

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Neurosciences & Neurology

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spinal-cord-injury

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sensorimotor cortex

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movement

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stimulation

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tetraplegia

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feedback

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hand

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body

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LNCO  
Available on Infoscience
January 31, 2022
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/185059
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