Researchers take step toward next-generation brain-computer interface system
Brown University
Tiny chips called neurograins are able to sense electrical activity in the brain and transmit that data wirelessly. Credit: Jihun Lee |
Most
current BCI systems use one or two sensors to sample up to a few hundred
neurons, but neuroscientists are interested in systems that are able to gather
data from much larger groups of brain cells.
Now, a team of researchers has taken a key step toward a new concept for a future BCI system — one that employs a coordinated network of independent, wireless microscale neural sensors, each about the size of a grain of salt, to record and stimulate brain activity.
The sensors, dubbed “neurograins,” independently
record the electrical pulses made by firing neurons and send the signals
wirelessly to a central hub, which coordinates and processes the signals.
In
a study published on August 12 in Nature Electronics,
the research team demonstrated the use of nearly 50 such autonomous neurograins
to record neural activity in a rodent.
The
results, the researchers say, are a step toward a system that could one day
enable the recording of brain signals in unprecedented detail, leading to new
insights into how the brain works and new therapies for people with brain or
spinal injuries.
“One of the big challenges in the field of brain-computer interfaces is engineering ways of probing as many points in the brain as possible,” said Arto Nurmikko, a professor in Brown’s School of Engineering and the study’s senior author.
“Up
to now, most BCIs have been monolithic devices — a bit like little beds of
needles. Our team’s idea was to break up that monolith into tiny sensors that
could be distributed across the cerebral cortex. That’s what we’ve been able to
demonstrate here.”
The team, which includes experts from Brown, Baylor University, University of California at San Diego and Qualcomm, began the work of developing the system about four years ago. The challenge was two-fold, said Nurmikko, who is affiliated with Brown's Carney Institute for Brain Science.
The first part required shrinking the
complex electronics involved in detecting, amplifying and transmitting neural
signals into the tiny silicon neurograin chips. The team first designed and
simulated the electronics on a computer, and went through several fabrication
iterations to develop operational chips.
The second challenge was developing the body-external communications hub that receives signals from those tiny chips. The device is a thin patch, about the size of a thumb print, that attaches to the scalp outside the skull.
It works
like a miniature cellular phone tower, employing a network protocol to
coordinate the signals from the neurograins, each of which has its own network
address. The patch also supplies power wirelessly to the neurograins, which are
designed to operate using a minimal amount of electricity.
“This
work was a true multidisciplinary challenge,” said Jihun Lee, a postdoctoral
researcher at Brown and the study’s lead author. “We had to bring together
expertise in electromagnetics, radio frequency communication, circuit design, fabrication
and neuroscience to design and operate the neurograin system.”
The
goal of this new study was to demonstrate that the system could record neural
signals from a living brain — in this case, the brain of a rodent. The team
placed 48 neurograins on the animal’s cerebral cortex, the outer layer of the
brain, and successfully recorded characteristic neural signals associated with
spontaneous brain activity.
The
team also tested the devices’ ability to stimulate the brain as well as record
from it. Stimulation is done with tiny electrical pulses that can activate
neural activity. The stimulation is driven by the same hub that coordinates
neural recording and could one day restore brain function lost to illness or
injury, researchers hope.
The
size of the animal’s brain limited the team to 48 neurograins for this study,
but the data suggest that the current configuration of the system could support
up to 770. Ultimately, the team envisions scaling up to many thousands of
neurograins, which would provide a currently unattainable picture of brain
activity.
"It
was a challenging endeavor, as the system demands simultaneous wireless power
transfer and networking at the mega-bit-per-second rate, and this has to be
accomplished under extremely tight silicon area and power constraints,” said
Vincent Leung, an associate professor in the Department of Electrical and
Computer Engineering at Baylor. “Our team pushed the envelope for distributed
neural implants.”
There’s
much more work to be done to make that complete system a reality, but
researchers said this study represents a key step in that direction.
“Our
hope is that we can ultimately develop a system that provides new scientific
insights into the brain and new therapies that can help people affected by
devastating injuries,” Nurmikko said.
Other
co-authors on the research were Ah-Hyoung Lee (Brown), Jiannan Huang (UCSD),
Peter Asbeck (UCSD), Patrick P. Mercier (UCSD), Stephen Shellhammer (Qualcomm),
Lawrence Larson (Brown) and Farah Laiwalla (Brown). The research was supported
by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (N66001-17-C-4013).