Head-worn spectroscopy system measures neural activity during human interaction

March 29, 2017
A wearable spectroscopy device can measure neural activity during real-life human interaction situations.

Biomedical engineers at Drexel University (Philadelphia, PA), in collaboration with psychologists at Princeton University (Princeton, NJ), are investigating use of a wearable functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) device to measure neural activity during real-life human interaction situations. The fNIRS system can be worn like a headband.

Related: Imaging distributed function and networks in the human brain

A new study shows that the fNIRS device can measure brain synchronization during conversation, so it can now be used to study everything from doctor-patient communication to how people consume cable news.

"Being able to look at how multiple brains interact is an emerging context in social neuroscience," says Hasan Ayaz, Ph.D., an associate research professor in Drexel's School of Biomedical Engineering, Science and Health Systems, who led the research team. "We live in a social world where everybody is interacting. And we now have a tool that can give us richer information about the brain during everyday tasks—such as natural communication—that we could not receive in artificial lab settings or from single brain studies."

The current study is based on previous research from Uri Hasson, Ph.D., an associate professor at Princeton University who has used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to study the brain mechanisms underlying the production and comprehension of language. Hasson has found that a listener's brain activity actually mirrors the speaker's brain when he or she is telling story about a real-life experience. And higher coupling is associated with better understanding.

However, traditional brain imaging methods have certain limitations. In particular, fMRI requires subjects to lie down motionlessly in a noisy scanning environment. With this kind of setup, it is not possible to simultaneously scan the brains of multiple individuals who are speaking face-to-face. Recognizing this, the Drexel researchers sought to investigate whether the portable fNIRS system could be a more effective approach to probe the brain-to-brain coupling question in natural settings.

For their study, a native English speaker and two native Turkish speakers told an unrehearsed, real-life story in their native language. Their stories were recorded and their brains were scanned using fNIRS. Fifteen English speakers then listened to the recording, in addition to a story that was recorded at a live storytelling event.

The researchers targeted the prefrontal and parietal areas of the brain, which include cognitive and higher order areas that are involved in a person's capacity to discern beliefs, desires, and goals of others. They hypothesized that a listener's brain activity would correlate with the speaker's only when listening to a story they understood (the English version). A second objective of the study was to compare the fNIRS results with data from a similar study that had used fMRI.

They found that when fNIRS measured the oxygenation and deoxygenation of blood cells in the test subject's brains, the listeners' brain activity matched only with the English speakers. These results also correlated with the previous fMRI study.

This new research supports fNIRS as a viable future tool to study brain-to-brain coupling during social interaction. The system can be used to offer important information about how to better communicate in many different environments, including classrooms, business meetings, political rallies, and doctors' offices.

Full details of the work appear in the journal Scientific Reports; for more information, please visit http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/srep43293.

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