Mind-Reading Devices to Help the Speechless Speak

Researchers decode brain signals using microelectrodes.

ByABC News
September 10, 2010, 3:11 PM

Sept. 12, 2010— -- The thoughts are there, but there is no way to express them. For "locked in" patients, many with Lou Gehrig's disease, the only way to communicate tends to be through blinking in code.

But now, words can be read directly from patients' minds by attaching microelectrode grids to the surface of the brain and learning which signals mean which words, a development that will ultimately help such patients talk again.

"They're perfectly aware. They just can't get signals out of their brain to control their facial expressions. "They're the patients we'd like to help first," said University of Utah's Bradley Greger, an assistant professor of bioengineering who, with neurosurgery professor Paul House, M.D., published the study in the October issue of the Journal of Neural Engineering.

Some severely-epileptic patients have the seizure-stricken parts of the brain removed. This standard procedure requires cutting the skull open and putting large, button-sized electrodes on the brain to determine just what needs removal. The electrodes are then taken off the brain.

The University of Utah team worked with an epileptic patient who let them crowd together much smaller devices, called micro-electrocorticography, onto his brain prior to surgery.

"The microelectrode grids that we placed on top of the brain are actually simple technology," Greger said. Made from platinum wires and silicone, a grid of 16 microelectrodes is less than a centimeter in diameter.

"The hard part for us was to figure out how to take the recordings we got from the microelectrodes and relate it to the words that the patients were speaking," Greger said.

Microelectrode grids sat on two parts of the volunteer's brain crucial for speech: the Face-Motor Cortex and Wernicke's area. Both grids were hooked up to a computer and run through an algorithm. The researchers asked the volunteer to repeat a string of 10 words out loud while the computer read the brain signals: "yes," "no," "hot," "cold," "hungry," "thirsty," "hello," "goodbye," "more" and "less."