Single-pulse electrical stimulation artifact removal using the novel matching pursuit-based artifact reconstruction and removal method (MPARRM).
Tao XieThomas J FoutzMarkus AdamekJames R SwiftCory S InmanJoseph R MannsEric C LeuthardtJon T WilliePeter BrunnerPublished in: Journal of neural engineering (2023)
Single-pulse electrical stimulation (SPES) has been widely used to probe effective connectivity. However, analysis of the neural response is often confounded by stimulation artifacts. We developed a novel matching pursuit-based artifact reconstruction and removal method (MPARRM) capable of removing artifacts from stimulation-artifact-affected electrophysiological signals. 

Approach: To validate MPARRM across a wide range of potential stimulation artifact types, we performed a bench-top experiment in which we suspended electrodes in a saline solution to generate 110 types of real-world stimulation artifacts. We then added the generated stimulation artifacts to ground truth signals (stereoelectroencephalography signals from 9 human subjects recorded during a receptive speech task), applied MPARRM to the combined signal, and compared the resultant denoised signal with the ground truth signal. We further applied MPARRM to artifact-affected neural signals recorded from the hippocampus while performing SPES on the ipsilateral basolateral amygdala in 9 human subjects.

Results: MPARRM could remove stimulation artifacts without introducing spectral leakage or temporal spread. It accommodated variable stimulation parameters and recovered the early response to SPES within a wide range of frequency bands. Specifically, in the early response period (5 to 10 ms following stimulation onset), we found that the broadband gamma power (70-170 Hz) of the denoised signal was highly correlated with the ground truth signal (R=0.98±0.02, Pearson), and the broadband gamma activity of the denoised signal faithfully revealed the responses to the auditory stimuli within the ground truth signal with 94±1.47% sensitivity and 99±1.01% specificity. We further found that MPARRM could reveal the expected temporal progression of broadband gamma activity along the anterior-posterior axis of the hippocampus in response to the ipsilateral amygdala stimulation.

Significance: MPARRM could faithfully remove SPES artifacts without confounding the electrophysiological signal components, especially during the early-response period. This method can facilitate the understanding of the neural response mechanisms of SPES.
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