Rodent Wearable Ultrasound System for Wireless Neural Recording

David Piech1, Joshua Kay1, Bernhard Boser, Michel Maharbiz2

  • 1University of California - Berkeley
  • 2University of California Berkeley

Details

14:35 - 14:50 | Wed 12 Jul | Plonsey Room | WeBT9.2

Session: Neural Interfaces I

Abstract

Advances in minimally-invasive, distributed biological interface nodes enable possibilities for networks of sensors and actuators to connect the brain with external devices. The recent development of the neural dust sensor mote has shown that utilizing ultrasound backscatter communication enables untethered sub-mm neural recording devices. These implanted sensor motes require a wearable external ultrasound interrogation device to enable in-vivo, freely-behaving neural interface experiments. However, minimizing the complexity and size of the implanted sensors shifts the power and processing burden to the external interrogator. In this paper, we present an ultrasound backscatter interrogator that supports realtime backscatter processing in a rodent-wearable, completely wireless device. We demonstrate a generic digital encoding scheme which is intended for transmitting neural information. The system integrates a front-end ultrasonic interface ASIC with off-the-shelf components to enable a highly compact ultrasound interrogation device intended for rodent neural interface experiments but applicable to other model systems.