Blind identification of the spinal cord output in humans with high-density electrode arrays implanted in muscles
Journal article, 2022

Invasive electromyography opened a new window to explore motoneuron behavior in vivo. However, the technique is limited by the small fraction of active motoneurons that can be concurrently detected, precluding a population analysis in natural tasks. Here, we developed a high-density intramuscular electrode for in vivo human recordings along with a fully automatic methodology that could detect the discharges of action potentials of up to 67 concurrently active motoneurons with 99% accuracy. These data revealed that motoneurons of the same pool receive common synaptic input at frequencies up to 75 Hz and that late-recruited motoneurons inhibit the discharges of those recruited earlier. These results constitute an important step in the population coding analysis of the human motor system in vivo.

Author

Silvia Muceli

Chalmers, Electrical Engineering, Signal Processing and Biomedical Engineering

Wigand Poppendieck

Mannheim University of Applied Sciences

Ales Holobar

University of Maribor

Simon Gandevia

Neuroscience Research Australia and University of New South Wales

David Liebetanz

University Medical Center Göttingen

Dario Farina

Imperial College London

Science advances

2375-2548 (eISSN)

Vol. 8 46 eabo5040

Subject Categories

Medical Engineering

Neurosciences

Medical Biotechnology

DOI

10.1126/sciadv.abo5040

PubMed

36383647

More information

Latest update

10/26/2023