EEG Decoding of Pain Perception for a Real-Time Reflex System in Prostheses

2021 ◽  
pp. 47-58
Author(s):  
Zied Tayeb ◽  
Rohit Bose ◽  
Andrei Dragomir ◽  
Luke E. Osborn ◽  
Nitish V. Thakor ◽  
...  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Zied Tayeb ◽  
Rohit Bose ◽  
Andrei Dragomir ◽  
Luke E. Osborn ◽  
Nitish V. Thakor ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Youngsun Kong ◽  
Hugo Posada-Quintero ◽  
Ki Chon

BACKGROUND The subjectiveness of pain leads to inaccurate pain management, which can exacerbate drug addiction and overdose. The consequence is tremendous cost to society and individuals as the opioid crisis grows. Given that pain is often experienced in patients’ homes, there is an urgent need for ambulatory devices that can quantify pain in real time. OBJECTIVE We developed a smartphone-based system for real-time objective pain measurement and assessment using a wrist-worn electrodermal activity (EDA) device. METHODS Our smartphone application collects EDA signals from a wrist-worn device and evaluates pain based on the computation of three pain-sensitive EDA indices: the time-varying index of EDA (TVSymp); modified TVSymp (MTVSymp), and the derivative of phasic EDA (dPhEDA). For testing of our computational algorithms that were embedded in a smartphone application, ten subjects underwent heat pain using a thermal grill, which delivered a level of pain that was calibrated for each subject to be 8 out of 10 on a visual analog scale (VAS). The thermal grill induces heat pain perception without tissue injury using the temperature difference between warm and cold water. All of the wearable-collected EDA signal processing was performed using a smartphone application. Furthermore, another group of fifteen subjects underwent pain stimulation using electrical pulses (EP), which elicited a VAS pain score level 7 out of 10. For EP data collection, EDA signals were collected using a non-wearable device but the same smartphone application was used to calculate the EDA-derived pain indices. We set 5-second segments before and after each pain stimulus to be painless and pain segments, respectively, and trained eight machine-learning classifiers to test the feasibility of our smartphone and EDA-based system to detect pain in real-time. Parameters of the classifiers were optimized using the grid search cross-validation technique. We trained and tested the classifiers on both datasets with leave-one-subject-out cross-validation approach to prevent over-fitting of the models. RESULTS We obtained up to 82.1% accuracy in detecting pain. We also trained using only one dataset at a time and tested with other datasets (and vice versa) and achieved up to 83.1% accuracy. CONCLUSIONS Our results show the potential of a smartphone application to provide near real-time objective pain detection. This approach can potentially enable pain quantification for both acute and chronic pain and it is especially suited for subjects with communication disorders as well as infants.


2019 ◽  
Vol 33 (4) ◽  
pp. 309-313 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel A. González-Padilla ◽  
Alejandro González-Díaz ◽  
Borja García-Gómez ◽  
Felipe Villacampa-Aubá ◽  
Natalia Miranda-Utrera ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

1979 ◽  
Vol 44 ◽  
pp. 41-47
Author(s):  
Donald A. Landman

This paper describes some recent results of our quiescent prominence spectrometry program at the Mees Solar Observatory on Haleakala. The observations were made with the 25 cm coronagraph/coudé spectrograph system using a silicon vidicon detector. This detector consists of 500 contiguous channels covering approximately 6 or 80 Å, depending on the grating used. The instrument is interfaced to the Observatory’s PDP 11/45 computer system, and has the important advantages of wide spectral response, linearity and signal-averaging with real-time display. Its principal drawback is the relatively small target size. For the present work, the aperture was about 3″ × 5″. Absolute intensity calibrations were made by measuring quiet regions near sun center.


Author(s):  
Alan S. Rudolph ◽  
Ronald R. Price

We have employed cryoelectron microscopy to visualize events that occur during the freeze-drying of artificial membranes by employing real time video capture techniques. Artificial membranes or liposomes which are spherical structures within internal aqueous space are stabilized by water which provides the driving force for spontaneous self-assembly of these structures. Previous assays of damage to these structures which are induced by freeze drying reveal that the two principal deleterious events that occur are 1) fusion of liposomes and 2) leakage of contents trapped within the liposome [1]. In the past the only way to access these events was to examine the liposomes following the dehydration event. This technique allows the event to be monitored in real time as the liposomes destabilize and as water is sublimed at cryo temperatures in the vacuum of the microscope. The method by which liposomes are compromised by freeze-drying are largely unknown. This technique has shown that cryo-protectants such as glycerol and carbohydrates are able to maintain liposomal structure throughout the drying process.


Author(s):  
R.P. Goehner ◽  
W.T. Hatfield ◽  
Prakash Rao

Computer programs are now available in various laboratories for the indexing and simulation of transmission electron diffraction patterns. Although these programs address themselves to the solution of various aspects of the indexing and simulation process, the ultimate goal is to perform real time diffraction pattern analysis directly off of the imaging screen of the transmission electron microscope. The program to be described in this paper represents one step prior to real time analysis. It involves the combination of two programs, described in an earlier paper(l), into a single program for use on an interactive basis with a minicomputer. In our case, the minicomputer is an INTERDATA 70 equipped with a Tektronix 4010-1 graphical display terminal and hard copy unit.A simplified flow diagram of the combined program, written in Fortran IV, is shown in Figure 1. It consists of two programs INDEX and TEDP which index and simulate electron diffraction patterns respectively. The user has the option of choosing either the indexing or simulating aspects of the combined program.


Author(s):  
R. Rajesh ◽  
R. Droopad ◽  
C. H. Kuo ◽  
R. W. Carpenter ◽  
G. N. Maracas

Knowledge of material pseudodielectric functions at MBE growth temperatures is essential for achieving in-situ, real time growth control. This allows us to accurately monitor and control thicknesses of the layers during growth. Undesired effusion cell temperature fluctuations during growth can thus be compensated for in real-time by spectroscopic ellipsometry. The accuracy in determining pseudodielectric functions is increased if one does not require applying a structure model to correct for the presence of an unknown surface layer such as a native oxide. Performing these measurements in an MBE reactor on as-grown material gives us this advantage. Thus, a simple three phase model (vacuum/thin film/substrate) can be used to obtain thin film data without uncertainties arising from a surface oxide layer of unknown composition and temperature dependence.In this study, we obtain the pseudodielectric functions of MBE-grown AlAs from growth temperature (650°C) to room temperature (30°C). The profile of the wavelength-dependent function from the ellipsometry data indicated a rough surface after growth of 0.5 μm of AlAs at a substrate temperature of 600°C, which is typical for MBE-growth of GaAs.


Author(s):  
K. Harada ◽  
T. Matsuda ◽  
J.E. Bonevich ◽  
M. Igarashi ◽  
S. Kondo ◽  
...  

Previous observations of magnetic flux-lines (vortex lattices) in superconductors, such as the field distribution of a flux-line, and flux-line dynamics activated by heat and current, have employed the high spatial resolution and magnetic sensitivity of electron holography. And recently, the 2-D static distribution of vortices was also observed by this technique. However, real-time observations of the vortex lattice, in spite of scientific and technological interest, have not been possible due to experimental difficulties. Here, we report the real-time observation of vortex lattices in a thin superconductor, by means of Lorentz microscopy using a 300 kV field emission electron microscope. This technique allows us to observe the dynamic motion of individual vortices and record the events on a VTR system.The experimental arrangement is shown in Fig. 1. A Nb thin film for transmission observation was prepared by chemical etching. The grain size of the film was increased by annealing, and single crystals were observed with a thickness of 50∼90 nm.


2001 ◽  
Vol 7 (S2) ◽  
pp. 1012-1013
Author(s):  
Uyen Tram ◽  
William Sullivan

Embryonic development is a dynamic event and is best studied in live animals in real time. Much of our knowledge of the early events of embryogenesis, however, comes from immunofluourescent analysis of fixed embryos. While these studies provide an enormous amount of information about the organization of different structures during development, they can give only a static glimpse of a very dynamic event. More recently real-time fluorescent studies of living embryos have become much more routine and have given new insights to how different structures and organelles (chromosomes, centrosomes, cytoskeleton, etc.) are coordinately regulated. This is in large part due to the development of commercially available fluorescent probes, GFP technology, and newly developed sensitive fluorescent microscopes. For example, live confocal fluorescent analysis proved essential in determining the primary defect in mutations that disrupt early nuclear divisions in Drosophila melanogaster. For organisms in which GPF transgenics is not available, fluorescent probes that label DNA, microtubules, and actin are available for microinjection.


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