53 research outputs found

    Roadmap on semiconductor-cell biointerfaces.

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    This roadmap outlines the role semiconductor-based materials play in understanding the complex biophysical dynamics at multiple length scales, as well as the design and implementation of next-generation electronic, optoelectronic, and mechanical devices for biointerfaces. The roadmap emphasizes the advantages of semiconductor building blocks in interfacing, monitoring, and manipulating the activity of biological components, and discusses the possibility of using active semiconductor-cell interfaces for discovering new signaling processes in the biological world

    A wireless electro-optic platform for multimodal electrophysiology and optogenetics in freely moving rodents

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    This paper presents the design and the utilization of a wireless electro-optic platform to perform simultaneous multimodal electrophysiological recordings and optogenetic stimulation in freely moving rodents. The developed system can capture neural action potentials (AP), local field potentials (LFP) and electromyography (EMG) signals with up to 32 channels in parallel while providing four optical stimulation channels. The platform is using commercial off-the-shelf components (COTS) and a low-power digital field-programmable gate array (FPGA), to perform digital signal processing to digitally separate in real time the AP, LFP and EMG while performing signal detection and compression for mitigating wireless bandwidth and power consumption limitations. The different signal modalities collected on the 32 channels are time-multiplexed into a single data stream to decrease power consumption and optimize resource utilization. The data reduction strategy is based on signal processing and real-time data compression. Digital filtering, signal detection, and wavelet data compression are used inside the platform to separate the different electrophysiological signal modalities, namely the local field potentials (1–500 Hz), EMG (30–500 Hz), and the action potentials (300–5,000 Hz) and perform data reduction before transmitting the data. The platform achieves a measured data reduction ratio of 7.77 (for a firing rate of 50 AP/second) and weights 4.7 g with a 100-mAh battery, an on/off switch and a protective plastic enclosure. To validate the performance of the platform, we measured distinct electrophysiology signals and performed optogenetics stimulation in vivo in freely moving rondents. We recorded AP and LFP signals with the platform using a 16-microelectrode array implanted in the primary motor cortex of a Long Evans rat, both in anesthetized and freely moving conditions. EMG responses to optogenetic Channelrhodopsin-2 induced activation of motor cortex via optical fiber were also recorded in freely moving rodents

    Towards a Fully Implantable Closed-Loop Opto-Electro Stimulation Interface for Motor Neuron Disease Treatment

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    This paper presents a fully-implantable closed-loop opto-electro stimulation interface for motor neuron disease studies, designed for experiments with freely moving rodents. A low power consumption Bluetooth data link is used to wirelessly control 64 opto-electro stimulation channels and receive neural recording data. The implant is powered by a wirelessly rechargeable lithium-ion battery, which can support 2.5 hours continuous operation with a stimulation output up to 10 mA. The battery is recharged using a QI standard wireless inductive power link, which can deliver >100mW power at a distance of 2 cm. The total size of the implant system is 29 mm × 20 mm × 13 mm. Its performance is compared with the state-of-the-art

    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

    A Fully Implantable Opto-Electro Closed-Loop Neural Interface for Motor Neuron Disease Studies

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    This paper presents a fully implantable closed-loop device for use in freely moving rodents to investigate new treatments for motor neuron disease. The 0.18 µm CMOS integrated circuit comprises 4 stimulators, each featuring 16 channels for optical and electrical stimulation using arbitrary current waveforms at frequencies from 1.5 Hz to 50 kHz, and a bandwidth programmable front-end for neural recording. The implant uses a Qi wireless inductive link which can deliver >100 mW power at a maximum distance of 2 cm for a freely moving rodent. A backup rechargeable battery can support 10 mA continuous stimulation currents for 2.5 hours in the absence of an inductive power link. The implant is controlled by a graphic user interface with broad programmable parameters via a Bluetooth low energy bidirectional data telemetry link. The encapsulated implant is 40 mm × 20 mm × 10 mm. Measured results are presented showing the electrical performance of the electronics and the packaging method

    Optical cuff for optogenetic control of the peripheral nervous system

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    OBJECTIVE: Nerves in the peripheral nervous system (PNS) contain axons with specific motor, somatosensory and autonomic functions. Optogenetics offers an efficient approach to selectively activate axons within the nerve. However, the heterogeneous nature of nerves and their tortuous route through the body create a challenging environment to reliably implant a light delivery interface. APPROACH: Here, we propose an optical peripheral nerve interface – an optocuff -, so that optogenetic modulation of peripheral nerves become possible in freely behaving mice. MAIN RESULTS: Using this optocuff, we demonstrate orderly recruitment of motor units with epineural optical stimulation of genetically targeted sciatic nerve axons, both in anaesthetized and in awake, freely behaving animals. Behavioural experiments and histology show the optocuff does not damage the nerve thus is suitable for long-term experiments. SIGNIFICANCE: These results suggest that the soft optocuff might be a straightforward and efficient tool to support more extensive study of the PNS using optogenetics

    An Implantable Peripheral Nerve Recording and Stimulation System for Experiments on Freely Moving Animal Subjects

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    A new study with rat sciatic nerve model for peripheral nerve interfacing is presented using a fully-implanted inductively-powered recording and stimulation system in a wirelessly-powered standard homecage that allows animal subjects move freely within the homecage. The Wireless Implantable Neural Recording and Stimulation (WINeRS) system offers 32-channel peripheral nerve recording and 4-channel current-controlled stimulation capabilities in a 3 × 1.5 × 0.5 cm3 package. A bi-directional data link is established by on-off keying pulse-position modulation (OOK-PPM) in near field for narrow-band downlink and 433 MHz OOK for wideband uplink. An external wideband receiver is designed by adopting a commercial software defined radio (SDR) for a robust wideband data acquisition on a PC. The WINeRS-8 prototypes in two forms of battery-powered headstage and wirelessly-powered implant are validated in vivo, and compared with a commercial system. In the animal study, evoked compound action potentials were recorded to verify the stimulation and recording capabilities of the WINeRS-8 system with 32-ch penetrating and 4-ch cuff electrodes on the sciatic nerve of awake freely-behaving rats. Compared to the conventional battery-powered system, WINeRS can be used in closed-loop recording and stimulation experiments over extended periods without adding the burden of carrying batteries on the animal subject or interrupting the experiment

    Development of Advanced Closed-Loop Brain Electrophysiology Systems for Freely Behaving Rodents

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    [ES] La electrofisiología extracelular es una técnica ampliamente usada en investigación neurocientífica, la cual estudia el funcionamiento del cerebro mediante la medición de campos eléctricos generados por la actividad neuronal. Esto se realiza a través de electrodos implantados en el cerebro y conectados a dispositivos electrónicos para amplificación y digitalización de las señales. De los muchos modelos animales usados en experimentación, las ratas y los ratones se encuentran entre las especies más comúnmente utilizadas. Actualmente, la experimentación electrofisiológica busca condiciones cada vez más complejas, limitadas por la tecnología de los dispositivos de adquisición. Dos aspectos son de particular interés: Realimentación de lazo cerrado y comportamiento en condiciones naturales. En esta tesis se presentan desarrollos con el objetivo de mejorar diferentes facetas de estos dos problemas. La realimentación en lazo cerrado se refiere a todas las técnicas en las que los estímulos son producidos en respuesta a un evento generado por el animal. La latencia debe ajustarse a las escalas temporales bajo estudio. Los sistemas modernos de adquisición presentan latencias en el orden de los 10ms. Sin embargo, para responder a eventos rápidos, como pueden ser los potenciales de acción, se requieren latencias por debajo de 1ms. Además, los algoritmos para detectar los eventos o generar los estímulos pueden ser complejos, integrando varias entradas de datos en tiempo real. Integrar el desarrollo de dichos algoritmos en las herramientas de adquisición forma parte del diseño experimental. Para estudiar comportamientos naturales, los animales deben ser capaces de moverse libremente en entornos emulando condiciones naturales. Experimentos de este tipo se ven dificultados por la naturaleza cableada de los sistemas de adquisición. Otras restricciones físicas, como el peso de los implantes o limitaciones en el consumo de energía, pueden también afectar a la duración de los experimentos, limitándola. La experimentación puede verse enriquecida cuando los datos electrofisiológicos se ven complementados con múltiples fuentes distintas. Por ejemplo, seguimiento de los animales o miscroscopía. Herramientas capaces de integrar datos independientemente de su origen abren la puerta a nuevas posibilidades. Los avances tecnológicos presentados abordan estas limitaciones. Se han diseñado dispositivos con latencias de lazo cerrado inferiores a 200us que permiten combinar cientos de canales electrofisiológicos con otras fuentes de datos, como vídeo o seguimiento. El software de control para estos dispositivos se ha diseñado manteniendo la flexibilidad como objetivo. Se han desarrollado interfaces y estándares de naturaleza abierta para incentivar el desarrollo de herramientas compatibles entre ellas. Para resolver los problemas de cableado se siguieron dos métodos distintos. Uno fue el desarrollo de headstages ligeros combinados con cables coaxiales ultra finos y conmutadores activos, gracias al seguimiento de animales. Este desarrollo permite reducir el esfuerzo impuesto a los animales, permitiendo espacios amplios y experimentos de larga duración, al tiempo que permite el uso de headstages con características avanzadas. Paralelamente se desarrolló un tipo diferente de headstage, con tecnología inalámbrica. Se creó un algoritmo de compresión digital especializado capaz de reducir el ancho de banda a menos del 65% de su tamaño original, ahorrando energía. Esta reducción permite baterías más ligeras y mayores tiempos de operación. El algoritmo fue diseñado para ser capaz de ser implementado en una gran variedad de dispositivos. Los desarrollos presentados abren la puerta a nuevas posibilidades experimentales para la neurociencia, combinando adquisición elextrofisiológica con estudios conductuales en condiciones naturales y estímulos complejos en tiempo real.[CA] L'electrofisiologia extracel·lular és una tècnica àmpliament utilitzada en la investigació neurocientífica, la qual permet estudiar el funcionament del cervell mitjançant el mesurament de camps elèctrics generats per l'activitat neuronal. Això es realitza a través d'elèctrodes implantats al cervell, connectats a dispositius electrònics per a l'amplificació i digitalització dels senyals. Dels molts models animals utilitzats en experimentació electrofisiològica, les rates i els ratolins es troben entre les espècies més utilitzades. Actualment, l'experimentació electrofisiològica busca condicions cada vegada més complexes, limitades per la tecnologia dels dispositius d'adquisició. Dos aspectes són d'especial interès: La realimentació de sistemes de llaç tancat i el comportament en condicions naturals. En aquesta tesi es presenten desenvolupaments amb l'objectiu de millorar diferents aspectes d'aquestos dos problemes. La realimentació de sistemes de llaç tancat es refereix a totes aquestes tècniques on els estímuls es produeixen en resposta a un esdeveniment generat per l'animal. La latència ha d'ajustar-se a les escales temporals sota estudi. Els sistemes moderns d'adquisició presenten latències en l'ordre dels 10ms. No obstant això, per a respondre a esdeveniments ràpids, com poden ser els potencials d'acció, es requereixen latències per davall de 1ms. A més a més, els algoritmes per a detectar els esdeveniments o generar els estímuls poden ser complexos, integrant varies entrades de dades a temps real. Integrar el desenvolupament d'aquests algoritmes en les eines d'adquisició forma part del disseny dels experiments. Per a estudiar comportaments naturals, els animals han de ser capaços de moure's lliurement en ambients emulant condicions naturals. Aquestos experiments es veuen limitats per la natura cablejada dels sistemes d'adquisició. Altres restriccions físiques, com el pes dels implants o el consum d'energia, poden també limitar la duració dels experiments. L'experimentació es pot enriquir quan les dades electrofisiològiques es complementen amb dades de múltiples fonts. Per exemple, el seguiment d'animals o microscòpia. Eines capaces d'integrar dades independentment del seu origen obrin la porta a noves possibilitats. Els avanços tecnològics presentats tracten aquestes limitacions. S'han dissenyat dispositius amb latències de llaç tancat inferiors a 200us que permeten combinar centenars de canals electrofisiològics amb altres fonts de dades, com vídeo o seguiment. El software de control per a aquests dispositius s'ha dissenyat mantenint la flexibilitat com a objectiu. S'han desenvolupat interfícies i estàndards de naturalesa oberta per a incentivar el desenvolupament d'eines compatibles entre elles. Per a resoldre els problemes de cablejat es van seguir dos mètodes diferents. Un va ser el desenvolupament de headstages lleugers combinats amb cables coaxials ultra fins i commutadors actius, gràcies al seguiment d'animals. Aquest desenvolupament permet reduir al mínim l'esforç imposat als animals, permetent espais amplis i experiments de llarga durada, al mateix temps que permet l'ús de headstages amb característiques avançades. Paral·lelament es va desenvolupar un tipus diferent de headstage, amb tecnologia sense fil. Es va crear un algorisme de compressió digital especialitzat capaç de reduir l'amplada de banda a menys del 65% de la seua grandària original, estalviant energia. Aquesta reducció permet bateries més lleugeres i majors temps d'operació. L'algorisme va ser dissenyat per a ser capaç de ser implementat a una gran varietat de dispositius. Els desenvolupaments presentats obrin la porta a noves possibilitats experimentals per a la neurociència, combinant l'adquisició electrofisiològica amb estudis conductuals en condicions naturals i estímuls complexos en temps real.[EN] Extracellular electrophysiology is a technique widely used in neuroscience research. It can offer insights on how the brain works by measuring the electrical fields generated by neural activity. This is done through electrodes implanted in the brain and connected to amplification and digitization electronic circuitry. Of the many animal models used in electrophysiology experimentation, rodents such as rats and mice are among the most popular species. Modern electrophysiology experiments seek increasingly complex conditions that are limited by acquisition hardware technology. Two particular aspects are of special interest: Closed-loop feedback and naturalistic behavior. In this thesis, we present developments aiming to improve on different facets of these two problems. Closed-loop feedback encompasses all techniques in which stimuli is produced in response of an event generated by the animal. Latency, the time between trigger event and stimuli generation, must adjust to the biological timescale being studied. While modern acquisition systems feature latencies in the order of 10ms, response to fast events such as high-frequency electrical transients created by neuronal activity require latencies under 1ms1ms. In addition, algorithms for triggering or generating closed-loop stimuli can be complex, integrating multiple inputs in real-time. Integration of algorithm development into acquisition tools becomes an important part of experiment design. For electrophysiology experiments featuring naturalistic behavior, animals must be able to move freely in ecologically meaningful environments, mimicking natural conditions. Experiments featuring elements such as large arenaa, environmental objects or the presence of another animals are, however, hindered by the wired nature of acquisition systems. Other physical constraints, such as implant weight or power restrictions can also affect experiment time, limiting their duration. Beyond the technical limits, complex experiments are enriched when electrophysiology data is integrated with multiple sources, for example animal tracking or brain microscopy. Tools allowing mixing data independently of the source open new experimental possibilities. The technological advances presented on this thesis addresses these topics. We have designed devices with closed-loop latencies under 200us while featuring high-bandwidth interfaces. These allow the simultaneous acquisition of hundreds of electrophysiological channels combined with other heterogeneous data sources, such as video or tracking. The control software for these devices was designed with flexibility in mind, allowing easy implementation of closed-loop algorithms. Open interface standards were created to encourage the development of interoperable tools for experimental data integration. To solve wiring issues in behavioral experiments, we followed two different approaches. One was the design of light headstages, coupled with ultra-thin coaxial cables and active commutator technology, making use of animal tracking. This allowed to reduce animal strain to a minimum allowing large arenas and prolonged experiments with advanced headstages. A different, wireless headstage was also developed. We created a digital compression algorithm specialized for neural electrophysiological signals able to reduce data bandwidth to less than 65.5% its original size without introducing distortions. Bandwidth has a large effect on power requirements. Thus, this reduction allows for lighter batteries and extended operational time. The algorithm is designed to be able to be implemented in a wide variety of devices, requiring low hardware resources and adding negligible power requirements to a system. Combined, the developments we present open new possibilities for neuroscience experiments combining electrophysiology acquisition with natural behaviors and complex, real-time, stimuli.The research described in this thesis was carried out at the Polytechnic University of Valencia (Universitat Politècnica de València), Valencia, Spain in an extremely close collaboration with the Neuroscience Institute - Spanish National Research Council - Miguel Hernández University (Instituto de Neurociencias - Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientí cas - Universidad Miguel Hernández), San Juan de Alicante, Spain. The projects described in chapters 3 and 4 were developed in collabo- ration with, and funded by, Open Ephys, Cambridge, MA, USA and OEPS - Eléctronica e produção, unipessoal lda, Algés, Portugal.Cuevas López, A. (2021). Development of Advanced Closed-Loop Brain Electrophysiology Systems for Freely Behaving Rodents [Tesis doctoral]. Universitat Politècnica de València. https://doi.org/10.4995/Thesis/10251/179718TESI

    Proceedings of the Eighth Annual Deep Brain Stimulation Think Tank: Advances in Optogenetics, Ethical Issues Affecting DBS Research, Neuromodulatory Approaches for Depression, Adaptive Neurostimulation, and Emerging DBS Technologies

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    We estimate that 208,000 deep brain stimulation (DBS) devices have been implanted to address neurological and neuropsychiatric disorders worldwide. DBS Think Tank presenters pooled data and determined that DBS expanded in its scope and has been applied to multiple brain disorders in an effort to modulate neural circuitry. The DBS Think Tank was founded in 2012 providing a space where clinicians, engineers, researchers from industry and academia discuss current and emerging DBS technologies and logistical and ethical issues facing the field. The emphasis is on cutting edge research and collaboration aimed to advance the DBS field. The Eighth Annual DBS Think Tank was held virtually on September 1 and 2, 2020 (Zoom Video Communications) due to restrictions related to the COVID-19 pandemic. The meeting focused on advances in: (1) optogenetics as a tool for comprehending neurobiology of diseases and on optogenetically-inspired DBS, (2) cutting edge of emerging DBS technologies, (3) ethical issues affecting DBS research and access to care, (4) neuromodulatory approaches for depression, (5) advancing novel hardware, software and imaging methodologies, (6) use of neurophysiological signals in adaptive neurostimulation, and (7) use of more advanced technologies to improve DBS clinical outcomes. There were 178 attendees who participated in a DBS Think Tank survey, which revealed the expansion of DBS into several indications such as obesity, post-traumatic stress disorder, addiction and Alzheimer’s disease. This proceedings summarizes the advances discussed at the Eighth Annual DBS Think Tank

    Tools for interfacing, extracting, and analyzing neural signals using wide-field fluorescence imaging and optogenetics in awake behaving mice

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    Imaging of multiple cells has rapidly multiplied the rate of data acquisition as well as our knowledge of the complex dynamics within the mammalian brain. The process of data acquisition has been dramatically enhanced with highly affordable, sensitive image sensors enable high-throughput detection of neural activity in intact animals. Genetically encoded calcium sensors deliver a substantial boost in signal strength and in combination with equally critical advances in the size, speed, and sensitivity of image sensors available in scientific cameras enables high-throughput detection of neural activity in behaving animals using traditional wide-field fluorescence microscopy. However, the tremendous increase in data flow presents challenges to processing, analysis, and storage of captured video, and prompts a reexamination of traditional routines used to process data in neuroscience and now demand improvements in both our hardware and software applications for processing, analyzing, and storing captured video. This project demonstrates the ease with which a dependable and affordable wide-field fluorescence imaging system can be assembled and integrated with behavior control and monitoring system such as found in a typical neuroscience laboratory. An Open-source MATLAB toolbox is employed to efficiently analyze and visualize large imaging data sets in a manner that is both interactive and fully automated. This software package provides a library of image pre-processing routines optimized for batch-processing of continuous functional fluorescence video, and additionally automates a fast unsupervised ROI detection and signal extraction routine. Further, an extension of this toolbox that uses GPU programming to process streaming video, enabling the identification, segmentation and extraction of neural activity signals on-line is described in which specific algorithms improve signal specificity and image quality at the single cell level in a behaving animal. This project describes the strategic ingredients for transforming a large bulk flow of raw continuous video into proportionally informative images and knowledge
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