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Does FES Contribute to Cognitive Motor Task Discrimination?: An fNIRS study

Title
Does FES Contribute to Cognitive Motor Task Discrimination?: An fNIRS study
Author(s)
Cha, SeunghuiYang, JunmoAn, Jinung
Issued Date
2021-02-22
Citation
9th IEEE International Winter Conference on Brain-Computer Interface, BCI 2021
Type
Conference Paper
ISBN
9781728184852
Abstract
FES, widely used in clinical rehabilitation, is a kind of involuntary motion stimulator to generate passive motion by stimulating the target muscles. However, it is not yet clear how FES affects cognitive performance of motor task. This study aims to investigate cerebral cortex activation of effect of minimal FES during voluntary cognitive motor task discrimination by using fNIRS. Seven healthy right-handed persons participated in the experiment. Participants voluntarily perform the flexion/extension of the right hand, alternately grasping DigiFlex, which have five different grip forces. At the same time, they answer the strength of DigiFlex's power, which is provided randomly each time, by a scale of 1 to 5. During the test, fNIRS measures the cerebral hemodynamics of all cortical areas and also is scored the answer rate. At this point, FES stimulates target muscles with a minimum current for the subject to grasp DigiFlex of the smallest intensity of 0.34kgf. The effect of cognitive motor task discrimination by a minimal FES was overall increased the correct answer rate, but the cortical motor facilitation was decreased. These conflicting results require more subjects' participation in the experiment and more rigorous statistical analysis in the future. Nevertheless, exploring the FES' contribution to cognitive motor task discrimination from the perspective of cortical facilitation could be a novel and interesting approach. © 2021 IEEE.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11750/46943
DOI
10.1109/BCI51272.2021.9385306
Publisher
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc.
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