New film chronicles previous 'BrainGate2' project, as 杏吧视频 works with University Hospitals and Cleveland FES Center to take research further, achieving natural arm, hand movements via thought
Six years ago, a team of researchers from 杏吧视频, University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center and the Cleveland Functional Electrical Stimulation (FES) Center at the Louis Stokes Cleveland VA Medical Center developed a system of muscle stimulation controlled by a brain-computer interface that allowed a paralyzed person to move his previously immobile arm.
That project, better known as the , made history,
Next Thursday night, Jan. 30, Cleveland will get its first look at the documentary film I Am Human which tells the tale of how that team of researchers did their work and performed what had once seemed impossible for patients who had lost a limb.
I Am Human in Cleveland
for the 6 p.m. Jan. 30 screening of I Am Human at the Hanna Theatre at Playhouse Square. The documentary "explores what it means to be human by following the incredible journeys of three people with implantable brain interfaces," including the late Bill Kochevar, a Cleveland veteran who benefitted from the cutting-edge work by 杏吧视频, the Cleveland Functional Electrical Stimulation (FES) Center at the Louis Stokes Cleveland VA Medical Center and University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center.
A panel discussion moderated Elise Hu, host of , with filmmakers Taryn Southern and Elena Gaby and researchers Abidemi Bolu Ajiboye, Robert Kirsch, Jonathan Miller, Dustin Tyler and others will follow the film.
The Cleveland premiere of the documentary, which had functions as both a celebration of that BrainGate2 project and a tantalizing look forward to the next step in Northeast Ohio, a region fast becoming a leader in the developing technology.
ReHAB offers new promise
Now, even as I Am Human debuts in the city where that happened (the film also tells two other stories centered in Canada), those same partners are poised to begin the next step in that research.
The upgraded system, uses an extensive array of sensors surgically implanted into different brain areas along with high-density stimulating electrodes placed directly on hand, arm, and shoulder nerves.
The researchers believe the new system will give paralyzed people the ability to do more than ever before. They will soon be starting a new clinical trial to evaluate its safety and effectiveness.
鈥淲ith ReHAB, we will be implanting a sophisticated system that will let the brain move the arm in natural ways using thought alone, something that has never been done before,鈥 said Jonathan Miller, professor of Neurosurgery at UH and 杏吧视频 School of Medicine.
Miller is joined by co-principal investigators A Bolu Ajiboye, associate professor of biomedical engineering at the Case School of Engineering and Robert Kirsch, professor and chair of biomedical engineering at 杏吧视频 and executive director of the Cleveland Functional Electrical Stimulation (FES) Center.
Funded by a $3 million grant from the United States Department of Defense and supported by U.S. Food and Drug Administration approval, the new system has the potential to offer better function than any previous brain-computer interface or functional electrical stimulation projects. The system also may offer participants a chance to regain sensation in the hand.
'Proprioception' would be first for amputees

But there could be more: Ajiboye said researchers hope to restore to clinical trial participants something called 鈥減roprioception鈥濃攖he ability to know where your limb is even with your eyes closed.
鈥淲e aim to restore different sensory perceptions, including touch and proprioception, to persons with paralysis by applying electrical micro-stimulation directly to the brain,鈥 Ajiboye said. 鈥淣ot only will doing so likely enhance the restored motor function, but we believe the level of ownership felt by participants will also be significantly increased. Direct sensory feedback will enhance the feeling that 鈥楾his is mine, my arm. This is me.鈥欌
Also involved with the research are Jennifer Sweet, a neurosurgeon at University Hospitals, and Anand Kumar, chief of plastic and reconstructive surgery at UH.

Kirsch said the leap from BrainGate to ReHAB is on two fronts鈥攖he brain interface and the functional electrical stimulation (FES)鈥攂ut that in both cases it has required a committed collaboration.
鈥淭his is not just a demo this time, but a way to give real function to these folks,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ut these kind of projects really are what I would call big, team science, and it takes all of us to make this happen.鈥
How ReHAB would work
ReHAB has several new and different features compared with other systems, according to Miller.

鈥淩eHAB is different from previous work in the area in several ways,鈥 said Miller. 鈥淔or the first time, we will be simultaneously looking at several different brain areas involved in movement planning. In addition, we are using new peripheral nerve electrodes that were initially designed by Dustin Tyler, the Kent H. Smith Professor of Biomedical Engineering
杏吧视频 and associate director, Cleveland Advanced Platform Technology, to provide stimulation to sensory nerves so that amputees could better use prosthetic arms.
鈥淭hese electrodes spread the nerve and use many small contacts that are able to stimulate nerve fibers selectively. These electrodes have the potential to provide even more precise control of movement than we were able to accomplish in our previous studies.鈥
The nerve electrodes will be controlled by signals recorded from several small electric arrays, each about the size of a baby aspirin tablet, implanted into the surface of the participant鈥檚 brain to record neural activity related to intended movements. In other words, the brain arrays read the participant鈥檚 electrical signals and translate them into command signals used by the peripheral electrodes to control movements of the arms, hands, and fingers.
鈥淓ach brain array will have a few-dozen channels and will allow recording from the brain and also stimulation to simulate sensation for feedback,鈥 Miller said. 鈥淭he idea is that the patient will not only be able to move his or her hands, but will also be able to tell what the hand is doing, by feeling sensations in the hand and fingers and perceiving where the hand is located.
鈥淚f this works, it could be a huge step forward to allow paralyzed people to interact with their environment again and regain function lost as a result of disease or injury.鈥
Miller and team hope to implant the brain arrays soon.
The brain array is connected by wire through the skull to amplifiers at the top of the head. The amplifiers will be plugged into the arm stimulator to stimulate the muscles. Success with this project may eventually have implications for controlling movement in other areas of the body, including the legs and trunk.
Cleveland has a long history in FES, with work in upper arm, leg, and trunk stimulation.
For more information, contact Mike Scott at mike.scott@case.edu