5 research outputs found

    Outan: An On-Head System for Driving micro-LED Arrays Implanted in Freely Moving Mice

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    In the intact brain, neural activity can be recorded using sensing electrodes and manipulated using light stimulation. Silicon probes with integrated electrodes and micro-LEDs enable the detection and control of neural activity using a single implanted device. Miniaturized solutions for recordings from small freely moving animals are commercially available, but stimulation is driven by large, stationary current sources. We designed and fabricated a current source chip and integrated it into a headstage PCB that weighs 1.37 g. The proposed system provides 10-bit resolution current control for 32 channels, driving micro-LEDs with up to 4.6 V and sourcing up to 0.9 mA at a refresh rate of 5 kHz per channel. When calibrated against a micro-LED probe, the system allows linear control of light output power, up to 10 micro-W per micro-LED. To demonstrate the capabilities of the system, synthetic sequences of neural spiking activity were produced by driving multiple micro-LEDs implanted in the hippocampal CA1 area of a freely moving mouse. The high spatial, temporal, and amplitude resolution of the system provides a rich variety of stimulation patterns. Combined with commercially available sampling headstages, the system provides an easy to use back-end, fully utilizing the bi-directional potential of integrated opto-electronic arrays.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figure

    Biointegrated and wirelessly powered implantable brain devices: a review

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    Implantable neural interfacing devices have added significantly to neural engineering by introducing the low-frequency oscillations of small populations of neurons known as local field potential as well as high-frequency action potentials of individual neurons. Regardless of the astounding progression as of late, conventional neural modulating system is still incapable to achieve the desired chronic in vivo implantation. The real constraint emerges from mechanical and physical diffierences between implants and brain tissue that initiates an inflammatory reaction and glial scar formation that reduces the recording and stimulation quality. Furthermore, traditional strategies consisting of rigid and tethered neural devices cause substantial tissue damage and impede the natural behaviour of an animal, thus hindering chronic in vivo measurements. Therefore, enabling fully implantable neural devices, requires biocompatibility, wireless power/data capability, biointegration using thin and flexible electronics, and chronic recording properties. This paper reviews biocompatibility and design approaches for developing biointegrated and wirelessly powered implantable neural devices in animals aimed at long-term neural interfacing and outlines current challenges toward developing the next generation of implantable neural devices

    Bidirectional Wireless Telemetry for High Channel Count Optogenetic Microsystems

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    In the past few decades, there has been a significant progress in the development of wireless data transmission systems, from high data rate to ultra-low power applications, and from G-b per second to RFID systems. One specific area, in particular, is in wireless data transmission for implantable bio-medical applications. To understand how brain functions, neural scientists are in pursuit of high-channel count, high-density recordings for freely moving animals; yet wire tethering issue has put the mission on pause. Wireless data transmission can address this tethering problem, but there are still many challenges to be conquered. In this work, an ultra-low power ultra-wide band (UWB) transmitter with feedforward pulse generation scheme is proposed to resolve the long-existing problem in UWB transmitter. It provides a high-data rate capability to enable 1000 channels in broadband neural recording, assuming 10-bit resolution with a sampling rate of 20 kHz to accommodate both action potential (AP) and local field potential (LFP) recording, while remaining in ultra- low power consumption at 4.32 pJ/b. For the bi-directional communication between the wireless and recording/ stimulating module, a bit-wise time-division (B-TDD) duplex transceiver without cancellation scheme is presented. The receiver works at U-NII band (5.2GHz) and shares the same antenna with UWB transmitter. This significantly reduces the area consumption as well as power consumption for implantable systems. The system can support uplink at 200 Mbps for 1000 recording channels and downlink at 10 Mbps for 36 stimulation channels. With a 3.7 Volt 25mAh rechargeable battery, the system should be able to operate more than 1.5 hours straight for both recording and stimulation, assuming 1 LED channel with 100 µA, 10% duty-cycled stimulating current. The B-TDD transceiver is integrated with a dedicated recording/ stimulation optogenetic IC chip to demonstrate as a complete wireless system for implantable broadband optogenetic neural modulation and recording. The fully integrated system is less than 5 gram, which is suitable for rodent experiments.PHDElectrical EngineeringUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/155242/1/yujulin_1.pd

    Bidirectional Neural Interface Circuits with On-Chip Stimulation Artifact Reduction Schemes

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    Bidirectional neural interfaces are tools designed to “communicate” with the brain via recording and modulation of neuronal activity. The bidirectional interface systems have been adopted for many applications. Neuroscientists employ them to map neuronal circuits through precise stimulation and recording. Medical doctors deploy them as adaptable medical devices which control therapeutic stimulation parameters based on monitoring real-time neural activity. Brain-machine-interface (BMI) researchers use neural interfaces to bypass the nervous system and directly control neuroprosthetics or brain-computer-interface (BCI) spellers. In bidirectional interfaces, the implantable transducers as well as the corresponding electronic circuits and systems face several challenges. A high channel count, low power consumption, and reduced system size are desirable for potential chronic deployment and wider applicability. Moreover, a neural interface designed for robust closed-loop operation requires the mitigation of stimulation artifacts which corrupt the recorded signals. This dissertation introduces several techniques targeting low power consumption, small size, and reduction of stimulation artifacts. These techniques are implemented for extracellular electrophysiological recording and two stimulation modalities: direct current stimulation for closed-loop control of seizure detection/quench and optical stimulation for optogenetic studies. While the two modalities differ in their mechanisms, hardware implementation, and applications, they share many crucial system-level challenges. The first method aims at solving the critical issue of stimulation artifacts saturating the preamplifier in the recording front-end. To prevent saturation, a novel mixed-signal stimulation artifact cancellation circuit is devised to subtract the artifact before amplification and maintain the standard input range of a power-hungry preamplifier. Additional novel techniques have been also implemented to lower the noise and power consumption. A common average referencing (CAR) front-end circuit eliminates the cross-channel common mode noise by averaging and subtracting it in analog domain. A range-adapting SAR ADC saves additional power by eliminating unnecessary conversion cycles when the input signal is small. Measurements of an integrated circuit (IC) prototype demonstrate the attenuation of stimulation artifacts by up to 42 dB and cross-channel noise suppression by up to 39.8 dB. The power consumption per channel is maintained at 330 nW, while the area per channel is only 0.17 mm2. The second system implements a compact headstage for closed-loop optogenetic stimulation and electrophysiological recording. This design targets a miniaturized form factor, high channel count, and high-precision stimulation control suitable for rodent in-vivo optogenetic studies. Monolithically integrated optoelectrodes (which include 12 µLEDs for optical stimulation and 12 electrical recording sites) are combined with an off-the-shelf recording IC and a custom-designed high-precision LED driver. 32 recording and 12 stimulation channels can be individually accessed and controlled on a small headstage with dimensions of 2.16 x 2.38 x 0.35 cm and mass of 1.9 g. A third system prototype improves the optogenetic headstage prototype by furthering system integration and improving power efficiency facilitating wireless operation. The custom application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC) combines recording and stimulation channels with a power management unit, allowing the system to be powered by an ultra-light Li-ion battery. Additionally, the µLED drivers include a high-resolution arbitrary waveform generation mode for shaping of µLED current pulses to preemptively reduce artifacts. A prototype IC occupies 7.66 mm2, consumes 3.04 mW under typical operating conditions, and the optical pulse shaping scheme can attenuate stimulation artifacts by up to 3x with a Gaussian-rise pulse rise time under 1 ms.PHDElectrical EngineeringUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/147674/1/mendrela_1.pd
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