49 research outputs found
In vivo measurements with robust silicon-based multielectrode arrays with extreme shaft lengths
In this paper, manufacturing and in vivo testing
of extreme-long Si-based neural microelectrode arrays are presented. Probes with different shaft lengths (15–70 mm) are formed by deep reactive ion etching and have been equipped with platinum electrodes of various configurations. In vivo measurements on rats indicate good mechanical stability, robust implantation, and targeting capability. High-quality signals have been recorded from different locations of the cerebrum of the rodents. The accompanied tissue damage is characterized by histology
A Multimodal, SU-8-Platinum - Polyimide Microelectrode Array for Chronic In Vivo Neurophysiology
Utilization of polymers as insulator and bulk materials of microelectrode arrays (MEAs)
makes the realization of flexible, biocompatible sensors possible, which are suitable for various
neurophysiological experiments such as in vivo detection of local field potential
changes on the surface of the neocortex or unit activities within the brain tissue. In this
paper the microfabrication of a novel, all-flexible, polymer-based MEA is presented. The
device consists of a three dimensional sensor configuration with an implantable depth electrode
array and brain surface electrodes, allowing the recording of electrocorticographic
(ECoG) signals with laminar ones, simultaneously. In vivo recordings were performed in
anesthetized rat brain to test the functionality of the device under both acute and chronic
conditions. The ECoG electrodes recorded slow-wave thalamocortical oscillations, while
the implanted component provided high quality depth recordings. The implants remained
viable for detecting action potentials of individual neurons for at least 15 weeks
Dataset of cortical activity recorded with high spatial resolution from anesthetized rats
Publicly available neural recordings obtained with high spatial resolution are scarce. Here, we present an electrophysiological dataset recorded from the neocortex of twenty rats anesthetized with ketamine/xylazine. The wideband, spontaneous recordings were acquired with a single-shank silicon-based probe having 128 densely-packed recording sites arranged in a 32 × 4 array. The dataset contains the activity of a total of 7126 sorted single units extracted from all layers of the cortex. Here, we share raw neural recordings, as well as spike times, extracellular spike waveforms and several properties of units packaged in a standardized electrophysiological data format. For technical validation of our dataset, we provide the distributions of derived single unit properties along with various spike sorting quality metrics. This large collection of in vivo data enables the investigation of the high-resolution electrical footprint of cortical neurons which in turn may aid their electrophysiology-based classification. Furthermore, the dataset might be used to study the laminar-specific neuronal activity during slow oscillation, a brain rhythm strongly involved in neural mechanisms underlying memory consolidation and sleep
Laminar analysis of the slow wave activity in the somatosensory cortex of anesthetized rats.
Rhythmic slow waves characterize brain electrical activity during natural deep sleep and under anesthesia, reflecting the synchronous membrane potential fluctuations of neurons in the thalamocortical network. Strong evidence indicates that the neocortex plays an important role in the generation of slow wave activity (SWA), however, contributions of individual cortical layers to the SWA generation are still unclear. The anatomically correct laminar profiles of SWA were revealed under ketamine/xylazine anesthesia, with combined local field potential recordings, multiple-unit activity (MUA), current source density (CSD) and time-frequency analyses precisely co-registered with histology. The up-state related negative field potential wave showed the largest amplitude in layer IV, the CSD was largest in layers I and III, while MUA was maximal in layer V, suggesting spatially dissociated firing and synaptic/transmembrane processes in the rat somatosensory cortex. Up-state related firing could start in virtually any layers (III-VI) of the cortex, but were most frequently initiated in layer V. However, in a subset of experiments, layer IV was considerably active in initiating up-state related MUA even in the absence of somatosensory stimulation. Somatosensory stimulation further strengthened up-state initiation in layer IV. Our results confirm that cortical layer V firing may have a major contribution to the up-state generation of ketamine/xylazine-induced SWA, however, thalamic influence through the thalamorecipient layer IV can also play an initiating role, even in the absence of sensory stimulation. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved