Recommendations for promoting user agency in the design of speech neuroprostheses

Brain-computer interfaces (BCI) that directly decode speech from brain activity aim to restore communication in people with paralysis who cannot speak. Despite recent advances, neural inference of speech remains imperfect, limiting the ability for speech BCIs to enable experiences such as fluent con...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inFrontiers in human neuroscience Vol. 17; p. 1298129
Main Authors Sankaran, Narayan, Moses, David, Chiong, Winston, Chang, Edward F
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Switzerland Frontiers Research Foundation 18.10.2023
Frontiers Media S.A
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Summary:Brain-computer interfaces (BCI) that directly decode speech from brain activity aim to restore communication in people with paralysis who cannot speak. Despite recent advances, neural inference of speech remains imperfect, limiting the ability for speech BCIs to enable experiences such as fluent conversation that promote - that is, the ability for users to author and transmit messages enacting their intentions. Here, we make recommendations for promoting agency based on existing and emerging strategies in neural engineering. The focus is on achieving fast, accurate, and reliable performance while ensuring volitional control over when a decoder is engaged, what exactly is decoded, and how messages are expressed. Additionally, alongside neuroscientific progress within controlled experimental settings, we argue that a parallel line of research must consider how to translate experimental successes into real-world environments. While such research will ultimately require input from prospective users, here we identify and describe design choices inspired by human-factors work conducted in existing fields of assistive technology, which address practical issues likely to emerge in future real-world speech BCI applications.
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Edited by: Zachary Freudenburg, University Medical Center Utrecht, Netherlands
Reviewed by: Davide Valeriani, Google, United States
ISSN:1662-5161
1662-5161
DOI:10.3389/fnhum.2023.1298129