Electrical Stimulation of Cortex in Human Subjects and Conscious Sensory Aspects

1993 ◽  
pp. 68-116
Author(s):  
B. Libet
2005 ◽  
Vol 94 (5) ◽  
pp. 3443-3450 ◽  
Author(s):  
Edgar A. DeYoe ◽  
Jeffrey D. Lewine ◽  
Robert W. Doty

Macaques were trained to signal their detection of electrical stimulation applied by a movable microelectrode to perifoveal striate cortex. Trains of ≤100 cathodal, 0.2-ms, constant current pulses were delivered at 50 or 100 Hz. The minimum current that could be reliably detected was measured at successive depths along radial electrode penetrations through the cortex. The lowest detection thresholds were routinely encountered when the stimulation was applied to layer 3, particularly just at the juncture between layers 3 and 4A. On the average, there was a twofold variation in threshold along the penetrations, with the highest intracortical thresholds being in layers 4C and 6. Variations as high as 20-fold were obtained in some individual penetrations, whereas relatively little change was observed in others. The minimum detectable current was 1 μA at a site in layer 3, i.e., 10–100 times lower than that for surface stimulation. Because macaques, as do human subjects, find electrical stimulation of striate cortex to be highly similar at all loci (a phosphene in the human case), it is puzzling as to how such uniformity of effect evolves from the exceedingly intricate circuitry available to the effective stimuli. It is hypothesized that the stimulus captures the most excitable elements, which then suppress other functional moieties, producing only the luminance of the phosphene. Lowest thresholds presumably are encountered when the electrode lies among these excitable elements that can, with higher currents, be stimulated directly from some distance or indirectly by the horizontal bands of myelinated axons, the stria of Baillarger.


2015 ◽  
Vol 113 (10) ◽  
pp. 3866-3892 ◽  
Author(s):  
James O. Phillips ◽  
Leo Ling ◽  
Kaibao Nie ◽  
Elyse Jameyson ◽  
Christopher M. Phillips ◽  
...  

Animal experiments and limited data in humans suggest that electrical stimulation of the vestibular end organs could be used to treat loss of vestibular function. In this paper we demonstrate that canal-specific two-dimensionally (2D) measured eye velocities are elicited from intermittent brief 2 s biphasic pulse electrical stimulation in four human subjects implanted with a vestibular prosthesis. The 2D measured direction of the slow phase eye movements changed with the canal stimulated. Increasing pulse current over a 0–400 μA range typically produced a monotonic increase in slow phase eye velocity. The responses decremented or in some cases fluctuated over time in most implanted canals but could be partially restored by changing the return path of the stimulation current. Implantation of the device in Meniere's patients produced hearing and vestibular loss in the implanted ear. Electrical stimulation was well tolerated, producing no sensation of pain, nausea, or auditory percept with stimulation that elicited robust eye movements. There were changes in slow phase eye velocity with current and over time, and changes in electrically evoked compound action potentials produced by stimulation and recorded with the implanted device. Perceived rotation in subjects was consistent with the slow phase eye movements in direction and scaled with stimulation current in magnitude. These results suggest that electrical stimulation of the vestibular end organ in human subjects provided controlled vestibular inputs over time, but in Meniere's patients this apparently came at the cost of hearing and vestibular function in the implanted ear.


2014 ◽  
Vol 191 (4) ◽  
pp. 1009-1013 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mang L. Chen ◽  
Christopher J. Chermansky ◽  
Bing Shen ◽  
James R. Roppolo ◽  
William C. de Groat ◽  
...  

2013 ◽  
Vol 229 (2) ◽  
pp. 181-195 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher Phillips ◽  
Christina DeFrancisci ◽  
Leo Ling ◽  
Kaibao Nie ◽  
Amy Nowack ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (7) ◽  
pp. 3163
Author(s):  
Suhun Jung ◽  
Jae Hwan Bong ◽  
Seung-Jong Kim ◽  
Shinsuk Park

In this study, we proposed a novel machine-learning-based functional electrical stimulation (FES) control algorithm to enhance gait rehabilitation in post-stroke hemiplegic patients. The electrical stimulation of the muscles on the paretic side was controlled via deep neural networks, which were trained using muscle activity data from healthy people during gait. The performance of the developed system in comparison with that of a conventional FES control method was tested with healthy human subjects.


1979 ◽  
Vol 88 (4) ◽  
pp. 550-556 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arnold Starr ◽  
Derald E. Brackmann

Brain stem potentials were recorded from scalp electrode to biphasic square wave electrical stimulation of implanted electrodes in the cochlea of three patients. Reliable potentials could be recorded that appeared 1.5 to 2.0 msec prior to the customary acoustically-evoked brain stem potentials. The effects of variations in electrical stimulus parameters of rate and intensity were measured. Brain stem potentials can provide objective indices of the effectiveness of electrical stimulation of the cochlea in man.


1973 ◽  
Vol 82 (4) ◽  
pp. 486-503 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael M. Merzenich ◽  
Robin P. Michelson ◽  
C. Robert Pettit ◽  
Robert A. Schindler ◽  
Miriam Reid

A series of psychoacoustic experiments was conducted in subjects implanted with a permanent intracochlear bipolar electrode. These experiments were designed to reveal the nature of the sensation evoked by direct sinusoidal electrical stimulation of the acoustic nerve. A series of single unit experiments in the inferior colliculus of cats was then conducted, using intracochlear stimulus electrodes identical to those implanted in human subjects in all respects except size, and using identical stimuli. These physiological experiments were designed to reveal how sounds evoked by intracochlear electrical stimulation in humans are generated and encoded in the auditory nervous system. Among the results were the following: 1) The sensation arises from direct electrical stimulation of the acoustic nerve. It is not “electrophonic” hearing arising from electro-mechanical excitation of hair cells. 2) While sounds are heard with electrical stimulation at frequencies from below 25 to above 10,000 Hz, the useful range of discriminative hearing is limited to frequencies below 400–600 Hz. 3) There is no “place” coding of electrical stimuli of different frequency. Tonal sensations generated by electrical stimulation must be encoded by the time order of discharge of auditory neurons. 4) The periods of sinusoidal electrical stimuli are encoded in discharges of inferior colliculus neurons at frequencies up to 400–600 Hz. 5) Both psychoacoustic and physiological evidence indicates that the low tone sensations evoked by electrical stimulation are akin to the sensations of “periodicity pitch” generated in the normal cochlea. 6) Most cochlear hair cells are lost with intracochlear implantation with this electrode. Most ganglion cells survive implantation. Implications of these experiments for further development of an acoustic prosthesis are discussed.


1952 ◽  
Vol 98 (412) ◽  
pp. 421-426 ◽  
Author(s):  
Phyllis G. Croft

The fact that electrical stimulation of the brain can produce unconsciousness in man and animals has been known since the eighteenth century, and from time to time this knowledge has been used in the production of anaesthesia for surgical purposes; Hobday, in 1932, performed castrations and herniotomies in small animals under electrical general anaesthesia, and in 1935 Hertz used electrical anaesthesia for laparotomies in dogs. To-day electrical stunning is used in bacon factories with the object of rendering pigs unconscious before slaughter. Electroconvulsant therapy (E.C.T.) is widely used in mental hospitals for the treatment of certain conditions, and recently Freeman (1948) has modified this technique to produce surgical anaesthesia for prefrontal leucotomy.In some instances electrical anaesthesia has proved satisfactory, but there have been reports of “distorted consciousness” after E.C.T. in human subjects (Morgan, 1950), and of electrical curarization after industrial accidents (Hume, 1935); in these conditions the subject is conscious of sensation but unable to make voluntary movements. Such a condition is only appreciated when the subject is questioned after regaining full consciousness, and hence, if it occurred in animals, it would not be readily recognized.The object of the work described in this paper was to determine the effect of the many variables of electric stimulation, and to investigate the state of consciousness of human subjects and animals after electric stunning. It was hoped thus to provide a basis for future work on electrical anacsthesia and to acquire a better understanding of the action of E.C.T.


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