• A
  • A
  • A
  • ABC
  • ABC
  • ABC
  • А
  • А
  • А
  • А
  • А
Regular version of the site
  • HSE University
  • News
  • New Technologies for Preserving Brain Functions: ‘Not Magic, but Normal Engineering’

New Technologies for Preserving Brain Functions: ‘Not Magic, but Normal Engineering’

New Technologies for Preserving Brain Functions: ‘Not Magic, but Normal Engineering’

© HSE University

New methods of brain mapping will make it easier to identify the cortex areas responsible for speech functions and to perform operations on the brain, as well as reduce the likelihood of damage to important areas. In addition, this will allow for more frequent use of non-invasive methods for restoring speech and other functions lost due to injuries and illnesses.

The first joint scientific seminar was held as part of HSE University’s Strategic Project ‘Human Brain Resilience: Neurocognitive Technologies for Adaptation, Learning, Development and Rehabilitation in a Changing Environment’. Its topic was ‘New Technologies for Brain Function Preservation: Intraoperative Passive Mapping for the Prevention of Speech Disorders’.

Elena Odoevskaya

Elena Odoevskaya, Moderator, Vice Rector of HSE University, said that the first seminar of the new HSE University strategic project opens up a large programme of interdisciplinary research. She noted the importance of cooperation between university scientists and healthcare professionals.

Mikhail Sinkin, Leading Researcher, Department of Emergency Neurosurgery, N. V. Sklifosovsky Research Institute for Emergency Medicine, emphasised that the creation of brain-computer interfaces is fundamental scientific work that is being carried out in many countries around the world. In medicine, such interfaces are important for understanding the functional state of the brain and the specific work of the individual sections of its cortex. Corticography, a method of recording the brain's bioelectrical activity, can be used to study its various manifestations, including detecting the areas responsible for speech.

Alexey Ossadtchi

Alexey Ossadtchi, Director of the Centre for Bioelectric Interfaces at HSE University’s Institute for Cognitive Neuroscience, stressed the importance of removing the veil of mysticism from brain research and methods of its stimulation: ‘This is not magic, but normal engineering.’ He explained that everyone has the cerebral cortex areas responsible for speech, but in different people they can be in different segments. Speech mapping makes it possible to determine their location and avoid damage in the event of surgery, as well as facilitate the restoration of speech in cases of speech disorders. The current mapping procedure involves electrical stimulation of the brain, which leads to convulsions in some patients, and also requires the participation of a neurolinguist to record the performance of speech tasks.

A new method of passive mapping involves performing speech tasks without electrical stimulation, while recording their performance using an electroencephalograph displaying the intensity of the most stable gamma oscillations.

© HSE University

The technology proposed by the Centre for Bioelectric Interfaces involves the alternate activation of the visual and speech areas of the cerebral cortex at short intervals, which makes it possible to detect the activity of its different parts and lobes. Using the accumulated information, it is possible to interpret fragments of individual patients’ recordings. The new method can be applied not only during operations, but also in the interoperative period to understand whether a particular area is associated with speech, including in people with reduced cognitive function. The activity of several electrodes at once during the performance of speech tasks confirms the high probability of a connection between a brain region and speech function. It is also possible to use this method in non-invasive treatment of chronic diseases.

Alexey Ossadtchi also noted that the system created by scientists works with any signal amplifiers. This reduces the need for additional equipment, which can often interfere with operations.

He believes that in the future, the development of the new technique will make it possible to simulate the processes of interruption and restoration of speech, automatically mark fields for operations, and create adaptive grids for the adaptation of the patient’s brain after surgery.

The ability to identify the zone responsible for a patient’s speech function can also be used for non-invasive cognitive experiments, as well as the extraction and analysis of the obtained data.

Olga Dragoy

Olga Dragoy, Director of HSE University’s Centre for Language and Brain, emphasised that the proposed technological solutions also make it possible to solve linguistic problems. In her opinion, in order to study speech production, it is important to determine the brain regions responsible for converting thought signals into speech and articulation (intelligible pronunciation of sounds and words). The study of sensorimotor mechanisms in the cortex will facilitate the work of neurolinguists, identifying the brain parts engaged in different stages of speech activity—from pronunciation of words to their semantics and syntax.

Language, explained Olga Dragoy, is a distributed system; its elements interact with each other in a complex way. ‘You cannot talk about language mapping in general—it is unevenly distributed throughout the brain.’ So, post-stroke aphasia (a disorder of speech and understanding the speech of others) often leads, among other things, to slurred pronunciation of certain sounds and words, as well as forgetting individual words and their meanings.

Experiments during operations have shown that electrical stimulation of certain parts of the brain's frontal lobe disrupts speech initiative, making it difficult to complete a sentence that has been started. When other parts are stimulated, the patient may confuse lexemes.

The performance of specific speech tasks with and without the stimulation of certain brain regions will make it possible to determine which parts of the brain and its cortex are responsible for individual speech elements.

© HSE University

According to Olga Dragoy, the key task for the next three years is to compare the effectiveness of different research protocols: active squared (performing active speech tasks with stimulation), passive-active (without stimulation, but with an active speech task), and passive squared (without stimulation and with passive perception of speech).

She believes that in the future, a speech neuroprosthesis will likely be created to synthesise speech based on a signal from the cerebral cortex. This would make life easier for people recovering from strokes, heart attacks, and other types of brain damage. ‘What we are doing now can help target the areas in which the neural interface can be applied,’ explained Olga Dragoy.

New methods will also expand the application of linguistic models, computational linguistics, and neurolinguistics to the study of speech processes.

Oleg Karpov, Academician of the Russian Academy of Sciences, General Director of the Pirogov National Medical and Surgical Centre, expressed interest in what exactly passive mapping is useful for.

Alexey Ossadtchi explained that it allows surgeons to obtain more accurate information about the areas responsible for speech function and significantly reduce the likelihood of traumatic and disabling operation scenarios for the patient.

Mikhail Sinkin called passive mapping a technology that protects the patient's health as much as possible in a neurosurgical operation. ‘This is a glimpse into the future,’ he asserts.

The seminar was also attended by Andrey Zuev, Head of the Centre for Neurosurgery at the Pirogov National Medical and Surgical Centre; Sergei Shishkin, Leading Researcher of the MEG Centre, Head of the Neurocognitive Interfaces Group, Moscow State University of Psychology and Education; Vasilii Gromov, Deputy Head of the School of Data Analysis and Artificial Intelligence at the HSE University Faculty of Computer Science; Anna Shestakova, Director of HSE University’s Institute for Cognitive Neuroscience; Olga Lyashevskaya, Professor of the School of Linguistics at the HSE University Faculty of Humanities; Igor Sokolov, Administrative Manager of the strategic project ‘Human Brain Resilience: Neurocognitive Technologies for Adaptation, Learning, Development and Rehabilitation in a Changing Environment’.

At the end of the seminar, Elena Odoevskaya thanked the speakers and participants for the interesting reports and meaningful discussion. She emphasised that interdisciplinary research will allow researchers from different specialties to access new resources. At the same time, she believes that they have great pedagogical potential, teaching humanities students to work with data. ‘I think it will be an amazing experience,’ summed up HSE University’s Vice Rector.

See also:

Cognitive Reappraisal of Negative Emotions Can Help Manage Stress

Researchers at the HSE International Laboratory of Social Neurobiology assessed the effectiveness of two strategies for regulating emotions: reappraisal and suppression. Having analysed data on the electrical activity of 60 individuals’ brains, the scientists discovered that both approaches put additional strain on the nervous system. It was also found that individuals who are prone to emotional contagion tend to be more effective in using reappraisal and managing negative emotions. The paper has been published in Experimental Brain Research.

Russian Researchers Unveil Mechanism Underlying Language Processing Disruptions in Epilepsy Patients

Researchers at HSE University and the Pirogov National Medical and Surgical Centre have examined alterations induced by epilepsy in the language-related neural network within the brain. Using graph-based analysis, the researchers studied fMRI data from 28 patients and found that in epilepsy, both hemispheres of the brain become activated during language processing and short connections form between the hemispheres, while long connections within one hemisphere are disrupted. The study has been published in Epilepsy&Behavior.

HSE Creates ‘Transfer of Neurocognitive Technologies’ Consortium

HSE, the Pirogov National Medical and Surgical Centre, and the Centre for Speech Pathology and Neurorehabilitation of the Moscow Healthcare Department have signed an agreement on cooperation and the creation of a ‘neuro-consortium’ under the name ‘Transfer of Neurocognitive Technologies’. The new body will boost the development and implementation of advanced solutions in neurotechnology aimed at maintaining and improving people's health. The agreement was signed for five years, and the consortium is open to new participants.

'While it May Sound Futuristic, It Holds Great Promise': Olga Dragoy Shares Her Thoughts on Language Function Restoration and the Future of Neurotechnology

In the spring of 2023, the fifth strategic project of the Priority 2030 programme, 'Human Brain Resilience: Neurocognitive Technologies for Adaptation, Learning, Development and Rehabilitation in a Changing Environment,' was launched at HSE University. The strategic project brings together researchers from all campuses of HSE University. In her interview with the HSE News Service, Olga Dragoy, head of the strategic project and Director of the HSE Centre for Language and Brain, shares an overview of the advanced technologies neuroscientists are creating today, the underlying inspiration driving these efforts, and the operational dynamics of interdisciplinary applied projects.

‘It Was Great to Look at Scientific Achievements through the Eyes of a Journalist, not a Scientist’

HSE University in Nizhny recently hosted the 2nd Autumn Neuro-linguistic School ‘NeuroSciCom: Popularising Language and Brain Studies’ for scientists and students at the HSE Centre for Language and Brain Studies in Nizhny Novgorod. The school was held as part of the 'Human Brain Resilience: Neurocognitive Technologies for Adaptation, Learning, Development and Rehabilitation in a Changing Environment' Strategic Project of the Priority 2030 programme.

Card Index: 'Success and Self-Sustainability of the Individual in a Changing World'

To achieve success and well-being, a modern person needs to keep up with ongoing social, economic, technological and cultural changes. However, in order to adapt to these, you need to be competent, healthy and active, develop cognitive abilities, acquire new skills and maintain friendships. All of this can expand people’s capabilities, revealing their potential. The HSE's unique multidisciplinary strategic project 'Success and Self-Sustainability of the Individual in a Changing World', which brings together educators, sociologists, psychologists, economists, biologists, physicians and digital technology specialists, helps to solve some of these tasks. Working together, they have managed to create a navigation system to improve human achievements for the benefit of the whole of society.

The Brain Is a Network of Networks. Scientists Have Found a Way to Unravel Them

A team of researchers from HSE University and the Artificial Intelligence Research Institute (AIRI) have demonstrated the effectiveness of the PSIICOS method they had previously developed for non-invasive mapping the neural networks in the brain based on its electrical activity. Unlike other methods, it does not search for individual neuronal sources to be then combined into networks but instead looks directly for the functional networks of interconnected neuronal populations—and does so swiftly and accurately. The study findings have been published in NeuroImage.

HSE Neuroscientists Use Neural Network to Enhance Neurofeedback Technology

Researchers from HSE University and the Artificial Intelligence Research Institute (AIRI) have successfully lowered the latency between a change in brain activity and the presentation of the corresponding neurofeedback signal by a factor of 50. The results were obtained by employing a neural network trained in low-latency filtering of brain activity signals from diverse individuals. This approach opens up new prospects for the treatment of attention deficit disorder and epilepsy. A paper with the study findings has been published in Journal of Neural Engineering.

Online Rhythmic Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation Can Reveal the Precise Moment When Preferences Shift in the Human Brain

Cognitive dissonance is a complex and multifaceted psychological phenomenon that arises in challenging decision-making scenarios. Multiple regions of the brain participate in its occurrence, yet the neurodynamics of underlying cognitive mechanisms remain a subject of debate. Researchers from the HSE Institute for Cognitive Neuroscience have proposed the use of online transcranial magnetic stimulation applied to participants as they were actively engaged in tasks, to pinpoint the moment of cognitive dissonance resolution. Their findings have been published in a review paper in Frontiers in Human Neuroscience.

HSE University Holds 10th Summer School ‘Eye-tracking in the Lab and Beyond’

This year, more than 100 students from Russia and abroad took part in the 10th summer neurolinguistic school, ‘Eye-tracking in the Lab and Beyond’. The school is held annually by the HSE Center for Language and Brain. Leading experts spoke about advanced developments and research in the field of video-oculography.