A Fully Implantable, Programmable and Multimodal Neuroprocessor for Wireless, Cortically Controlled Brain-Machine Interface Applications.
J Signal Process Syst
; 69(3): 351-361, 2012 Dec 01.
Article
em En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-23050029
Reliability, scalability and clinical viability are of utmost importance in the design of wireless Brain Machine Interface systems (BMIs). This paper reports on the design and implementation of a neuroprocessor for conditioning raw extracellular neural signals recorded through microelectrode arrays chronically implanted in the brain of awake behaving rats. The neuroprocessor design exploits a sparse representation of the neural signals to combat the limited wireless telemetry bandwidth. We demonstrate a multimodal processing capability (monitoring, compression, and spike sorting) inherent in the neuroprocessor to support a wide range of scenarios in real experimental conditions. A wireless transmission link with rate-dependent compression strategy is shown to preserve information fidelity in the neural data. At 32 channels, the neuroprocessor has been fully implemented on a 5mm×5mm nano-FPGA, and the prototyping resulted in 5.19 mW power consumption, bringing its performance within the power-size constraints for clinical use. The optimal design for compression and sorting performance was evaluated for multiple sampling frequencies, wavelet basis choice and power consumption.
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1
Coleções:
01-internacional
Base de dados:
MEDLINE
Idioma:
En
Revista:
J Signal Process Syst
Ano de publicação:
2012
Tipo de documento:
Article