DocumentCode :
895674
Title :
A Low-Power Integrated Circuit for a Wireless 100-Electrode Neural Recording System
Author :
Harrison, Reid R. ; Watkins, Paul T. ; Kier, Ryan J. ; Lovejoy, Robert O. ; Black, Daniel J. ; Greger, Bradley ; Solzbacher, Florian
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Utah Univ., Salt Lake City, UT
Volume :
42
Issue :
1
fYear :
2007
Firstpage :
123
Lastpage :
133
Abstract :
Recent work in field of neuroprosthetics has demonstrated that by observing the simultaneous activity of many neurons in specific regions of the brain, it is possible to produce control signals that allow animals or humans to drive cursors or prosthetic limbs directly through thoughts. As neuroprosthetic devices transition from experimental to clinical use, there is a need for fully-implantable amplification and telemetry electronics in close proximity to the recording sites. To address these needs, we developed a prototype integrated circuit for wireless neural recording from a 100-channel microelectrode array. The design of both the system-level architecture and the individual circuits were driven by severe power constraints for small implantable devices; chronically heating tissue by only a few degrees Celsius leads to cell death. Due to the high data rate produced by 100 neural signals, the system must perform data reduction as well. We use a combination of a low-power ADC and an array of "spike detectors" to reduce the transmitted data rate while preserving critical information. The complete system receives power and commands (at 6.5 kb/s) wirelessly over a 2.64-MHz inductive link and transmits neural data back at a data rate of 330 kb/s using a fully-integrated 433-MHz FSK transmitter. The 4.7times5.9 mm2 chip was fabricated in a 0.5-mum 3M2P CMOS process and consumes 13.5 mW of power. While cross-chip interference limits performance in single-chip operation, a two-chip system was used to record neural signals from a Utah Electrode Array in cat cortex and transmit the digitized signals wirelessly to a receiver
Keywords :
CMOS integrated circuits; analogue-digital conversion; bioelectric potentials; biological tissues; biomedical electrodes; biomedical electronics; low-power electronics; microelectrodes; neuromuscular stimulation; prosthetics; 0.5 micron; 100-channel microelectrode array; 13.5 mW; 2.64 MHz; 330 kbits/s; 433 MHz; CMOS process; FSK transmitter; Utah electrode array; biomedical electronics; cat cortex; control signals; fully-implantable amplification; implantable devices; inductive link; low-power analog-to-digital converter; low-power circuit design; low-power integrated circuit; neural amplifier; neural signals; neuroprosthetic devices; prosthetic limbs; prototype integrated circuit; spike detectors; telemetry electronics; wireless 100-electrode neural recording system; Animals; Circuits; Cogeneration; Humans; Microelectrodes; Neural prosthesis; Neurons; Prosthetic limbs; Prototypes; Telemetry; Biomedical electronics; FSK transmitter; low-power circuit design; neural amplifier; neuroprosthetics;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Solid-State Circuits, IEEE Journal of
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0018-9200
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/JSSC.2006.886567
Filename :
4039585
Link To Document :
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