Intracortical Microstimulation Elicits Human Fingertip Sensations

2020 
The restoration of cutaneous sensation to fingers and fingertips is critical to achieving dexterous prosthesis control for individuals with sensorimotor dysfunction. However, localized and reproducible fingertip sensations in humans have not been reported via intracortical microstimulation (ICMS) in humans. Here, we show that ICMS in a human participant was capable of eliciting percepts in 7 fingers spanning both hands, including 6 fingertip regions (i.e., 3 on each hand). Median percept size was estimated to include 1.40 finger or palmar segments (e.g., one segment being a fingertip or the section of upper palm below a finger). This was corroborated with a more sensitive manual marking technique where median percept size corresponded to roughly 120% of a fingertip segment. Percepts showed high intra-day consistency, including high performance (99%) on a blinded finger discrimination task. Across days, there was more variability in percepts, with 75.8% of trials containing the modal finger or palm region for the stimulated electrode. These results suggest that ICMS can enable the delivery of localized fingertip sensations during object manipulation by neuroprostheses.
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