Paper List
-
A Theoretical Framework for the Formation of Large Animal Groups: Topological Coordination, Subgroup Merging, and Velocity Inheritance
This paper addresses the core problem of how large, coordinated animal groups form in nature, challenging the classical view of gradual aggregation by...
-
CONFIDE: Hallucination Assessment for Reliable Biomolecular Structure Prediction and Design
This paper addresses the critical limitation of current protein structure prediction models (like AlphaFold3) where high-confidence scores (pLDDT) can...
-
Generative design and validation of therapeutic peptides for glioblastoma based on a potential target ATP5A
This paper addresses the critical bottleneck in therapeutic peptide design: how to efficiently optimize lead peptides with geometric constraints while...
-
Pharmacophore-based design by learning on voxel grids
This paper addresses the computational bottleneck and limited novelty in conventional pharmacophore-based virtual screening by introducing a voxel cap...
-
Human-Centred Evaluation of Text-to-Image Generation Models for Self-expression of Mental Distress: A Dataset Based on GPT-4o
This paper addresses the critical gap in evaluating how AI-generated images can effectively support cross-cultural mental distress communication, part...
-
ANNE Apnea Paper
This paper addresses the core challenge of achieving accurate, event-level sleep apnea detection and characterization using a non-intrusive, multimoda...
-
DeeDeeExperiment: Building an infrastructure for integrating and managing omics data analysis results in R/Bioconductor
This paper addresses the critical bottleneck of managing and organizing the growing volume of differential expression and functional enrichment analys...
-
Cross-Species Antimicrobial Resistance Prediction from Genomic Foundation Models
This paper addresses the core challenge of predicting antimicrobial resistance across phylogenetically distinct bacterial species, where traditional m...
Toward Robust, Reproducible, and Widely Accessible Intracranial Language Brain-Computer Interfaces: A Comprehensive Review of Neural Mechanisms, Hardware, Algorithms, Evaluation, Clinical Pathways and Future Directions
The Hong Kong Polytechnic University | Chongqing University of Technology
30秒速读
IN SHORT: This review addresses the core challenge of fragmented and heterogeneous evidence that hinders the clinical translation of intracranial language BCIs, providing a unified framework to bridge neuroscience, hardware, algorithms, and clinical deployment.
核心创新
- Methodology Proposes an end-to-end, decision-oriented synthesis linking neural representations to recording choices, experimental design, decoding architectures, and translational constraints.
- Methodology Introduces a structured framework organized around five coupled design questions and a unified evaluation framework with cross-linguistic, cross-task benchmark templates.
- Biology Synthesizes neural mechanisms underlying overt, mimed, and imagined speech, highlighting the somatotopic organization and intermixed tuning in sensorimotor cortex, and the gradient of signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) across speech modalities.
主要结论
- Intracranial recordings (MEA, ECoG, SEEG) enable high-performance decoding, with state-of-the-art systems achieving up to 90.9 words per minute (wpm) and Word Error Rates (WER) as low as 3% in participant-specific tasks, yet cross-subject transfer remains a major bottleneck.
- Articulatory intermediate representations and language-prior-assisted frameworks (e.g., transformers) enhance robustness and data efficiency, with studies reporting mel-spectrogram correlation PCC ~0.806-0.838 and improved generalization in multi-subject training.
- Clinical translation requires addressing long-term stability (e.g., median accuracy ~90.59% over 3 months without recalibration in one study) and establishing unified evaluation metrics that integrate objective, perceptual, expressive, and longitudinal measures.
摘要: Intracranial language brain-computer interfaces (BCIs) offer a promising route for restoring communication in individuals with severe motor and speech impairments, but clinical translation remains limited by fragmented and heterogeneous evidence, as well as unresolved design trade-offs across neuroscience, hardware, algorithms, validation methods, and clinical integration. This review synthesizes recent progress across four key domains in intracranial speech neuroprosthetics: i) the neural mechanisms underlying overt, mimed, and imagined speech; ii) decision-oriented hardware comparisons of surgically implanted recording modalities, including microelectrode array (MEA), electrocorticography (ECoG), and stereotactic electroencephalography (SEEG); iii) experimental strategies for achieving cross-subject and multilingual generalization; and iv) advances in neural decoding, including sequence models, attention-based architectures (e.g., transformers), articulatory intermediate representations, and language-prior-assisted frameworks. We highlight persistent bottlenecks, including weak cross-subject transfer, long-term non-stationarity and recalibration burden, heterogeneous and non-comparable evaluation practices, limited naturalistic expressivity (especially for tonal/logosyllabic languages), and the low signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of neural activity in covert speech decoding. Our contributions are threefold: (1) an end-to-end, decision-oriented synthesis that links neural representations to recording choices, experimental design, decoding model architectures, and translational constraints; (2) a structured framework organized around five coupled design questions, accompanied by a unified evaluation framework and a cross-linguistic, cross-task benchmark template that integrates objective, perceptual, expressive, conversational, and longitudinal metrics; and (3) user-centered translational guidance that includes agency-preserving shared control, verifiable performance priorities, and scenario-specific minimum viable system (MVP) profiles for differentiating between reliability-first home communication and fidelity-first conversational speech restoration. We conclude with a call for larger multilingual, multi-center longitudinal datasets; harmonized benchmarks; adaptive yet interpretable decoders; prospective clinical validation; and transparent data-sharing and reporting practices with robust ethical safeguards. These efforts are essential to accelerate the safe and equitable deployment of speech neuroprostheses.