Texarkana Gazette

Study: implant allows fully paralyzed patient to communicat­e

- By Jonathan Moens

In 2020, Ujwal Chaudhary, a biomedical engineer then at the University of Tübingen and the Wyss Center for Bio and Neuroengin­eering in Geneva, watched his computer with amazement as an experiment that he had spent years on revealed itself. A 34-year-old paralyzed man lay on his back in the laboratory, his head connected by a cable to a computer. A synthetic voice pronounced letters in German :“E, A, D …“

The patient had been diagnosed a few years earlier with amyotrophi­c lateral sclerosis, which leads to the progressiv­e degenerati­on of brain cells involved in motion. The man had lost the ability to move even his eyeballs and was entirely unable to communicat­e; in medical terms, he was in a completely locked-in state.

Or so it seemed. Through Chaudhary’s experiment, the man had learned to select — not directly with his eyes but by imagining his eyes moving — individual letters from the steady stream that the computer spoke aloud. Letter by painstakin­g letter, one every minute or so, he formulated words and sentences.

“Wegen essen da wird ich erst mal des curry mit kartoffeln haben und dann bologna und dann gefuellte und dann kartoffeln suppe,” he wrote at one point: “For food I want to have curry with potato then bologna and potato soup.”

Chaudhary and his colleagues were dumbstruck. “I myself could not believe that this is possible,” recalled Chaudhary, whoi snow managing director at ALS VoicegGmbH, an euro biotechnol­ogy company based in Germany, and who no longer works with the patient.

The study, published last week in Nature Communicat­ions, provides the first example of a patient in a fully locked-in state communicat­ing at length with the outside world, said Niels Birbaumer, the leader of the study and a former neuroscien­tist at the University of Tübingen who is now retired.

Chaudhary and Birbaumer conducted two similar experiment­s in 2017 and 2019 on patients who were completely locked-in and reported that they were able to communicat­e. Both studies were retracted after an investigat­ion by the German Research Foundation concluded that the researcher­s had only partially recorded the examinatio­ns of their patients on video, had not appropriat­ely shown details of their analyses and had made false statements. The German Research Foundation, finding that Birbaumer committed scientific misconduct, imposed some of its most severe sanctions, including a five-year ban on submitting proposals and serving as a reviewer for the foundation.

The agency found that Chaudhary had also committed scientific misconduct and imposed the same sanctions for a three-year period. Both he and Birbaumer were asked to retract their two papers, and they declined.

The investigat­ion came after a whistleblo­wer, Martin Spüler, a researcher, raised concerns about the two scientists in 2018.

Birbaumer stood by the conclusion­s and has taken legal action against the German Research Foundation. The results of the lawsuit are expected to be published in the next two weeks, said Marco Finetti, a spokespers­on for the German Research Foundation. Chaudhary said his lawyers expected to win the case.

The German Research Foundation had no knowledge of the publicatio­n of the current study and will investigat­e it in the coming months, Finetti said. In an email, a representa­tive for Nature Communicat­ions who asked not to be named declined to comment on the details of how the study was vetted but expressed confidence with the process. “We have rigorous policies to safeguard the integrity of the research we publish, including to ensure that research has been conducted to a high ethical standard and is reported transparen­tly,” the representa­tive said.

“I would say it is a solid study,” said Natalie Mrachacz-Kersting, a brain-computer interface researcher at the University of Freiburg in Germany. She was not involved in the study and was aware of the previously retracted papers.

But Brendan Allison, researcher at the University of California San Diego, expressed reservatio­ns. “This work, like other work by Birbaumer, should be taken with a massive mountain of salt given his history,” Allison said. He noted that in a paper published in 2017, his own team had described being able to communicat­e with completely locked-in

“It will hurt science. We are going to lose things,” Rex said. “Just lay out a map and look at the Arctic. It is extremely difficult to do meaningful research in the Arctic if you ignore that big thing there that is Russia.”

—Markus Rex

the project remains “a deliberate attempt by countries with different ideologies to physically build something together.” Among the essential components being supplied by Russia is a massive supercondu­cting magnet awaiting testing in St. Petersburg before shipment — due in several years.

Researcher­s hunting for elusive dark matter hope they’ll not lose the more than 1,000 Russian scientists contributi­ng to experiment­s at the European nuclear research organizati­on CERN. Joachim Mnich, the director for research and computing, said punishment should be reserved for the Russian government, not Russian colleagues. CERN has already suspended Russia’s observer status at the organizati­on, but “we are not sending anyone home,” Mnich told the AP.

In other fields as well, scientists say Russian expertise will be missed. Adrian Muxworthy, a professor at London’s Imperial College, says that in his research of the Earth’s magnetic field, Russianmad­e instrument­s “can do types of measuremen­ts that other commercial instrument­s made in the West can’t do.” Muxworthy is no longer expecting delivery from Russia of 250 million-year-old Siberian rocks that he had planned to study.

In Germany, atmospheri­c scientist Markus Rex said the year-long internatio­nal mission he led into the Arctic in 2019-2020 would have been impossible without powerful Russian ships that bust through the ice to keep their research vessel supplied with food, fuel and other essentials. The Ukraine invasion is stopping this “very close collaborat­ion,” as well as future joint efforts to study the impact of climate change, he told the AP.

“It will hurt science. We are going to lose things,” Rex said. “Just lay out a map and look at the Arctic. It is extremely difficult to do meaningful research in the Arctic if you ignore that big thing there that is Russia.”

“It really is a nightmare because the Arctic is changing rapidly,” he added. “It won’t wait for us to solve all of our political conflicts or ambitions to just conquer other countries.”

 ?? European Space Agency via AP, File ?? ■ This illustrati­on made available by the European Space Agency shows the European-Russian ExoMars rover. The war in Ukraine is causing a swift and broad decaying of scientific ties between Russia and the West. Europe's space agency is wrestling with how its planned Mars rover might survive freezing nights on the Red Planet without its Russian heating unit.
European Space Agency via AP, File ■ This illustrati­on made available by the European Space Agency shows the European-Russian ExoMars rover. The war in Ukraine is causing a swift and broad decaying of scientific ties between Russia and the West. Europe's space agency is wrestling with how its planned Mars rover might survive freezing nights on the Red Planet without its Russian heating unit.
 ?? CNES/AP ?? ■ This photo provided by the CNES shows a Russian Soyuz rocket lifting off from the Kourou space base, French Guiana, Dec.18, 2019. The war in Ukraine is causing a swift and broad decaying of scientific ties between Russia and the West.
CNES/AP ■ This photo provided by the CNES shows a Russian Soyuz rocket lifting off from the Kourou space base, French Guiana, Dec.18, 2019. The war in Ukraine is causing a swift and broad decaying of scientific ties between Russia and the West.

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