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Future Actions Decoded And Predicted In The Human Brain

a participant in the studyBringing the real world into the brain scanner, researchers at The University of Western Ontario from The Centre for Brain and Mind can now determine the action a person was planning, mere moments before that action is actually executed. Included in this report is several videos – one that shows FMRI data and another that contains interviews with the two lead researchers.

The findings were published this week in the prestigious Journal of Neuroscience, in the paper, “Decoding Action Intentions from Preparatory Brain Activity in Human Parieto-Frontal Networks.”

“This is a considerable step forward in our understanding of how the human brain plans actions,” says Jason Gallivan, a Western Neuroscience PhD student, who was the first author on the paper.

a participant in the study

A volunteer completes tasks while in the functional magnetic imaging (fMRI) machine. This research project focuses on understanding how the human brain plans actions.

Over the course of the one-year study, human subjects had their brain activity scanned using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) while they performed one of three hand movements: grasping the top of an object, grasping the bottom of the object, or simply reaching out and touching the object. The team found that by using the signals from many brain regions, they could predict, better than chance, which of the actions the volunteer was merely intending to do, seconds later.


Through brain imaging, researchers from the Centre for Brain and Mind at The University of Western Ontario can now determine the action a person was planning, mere moments before that action is actually executed. This finding could have clinical implications for controlling prosthetic limbs in movement-impaired patient populations. This short video is the brain timecourse of one of the subjects in the research.

“Neuroimaging allows us to look at how action planning unfolds within human brain areas without having to insert electrodes directly into the human brain. This is obviously far less intrusive,” explains Western Psychology professor Jody Culham, who was the paper’s senior author.


Through brain imaging, researchers from the Centre for Brain and Mind at The University of Western Ontario can now determine the action a person was planning, mere moments before that action is actually executed. This finding could have clinical implications for controlling prosthetic limbs in movement-impaired patient populations.

Gallivan says the new findings could also have important clinical implications: “Being able to predict a human’s desired movements using brain signals takes us one step closer to using those signals to control prosthetic limbs in movement-impaired patient populations, like those who suffer from spinal cord injuries or locked-in syndrome.”

Material adapted from University of Western Ontario.

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