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1.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38498746

ABSTRACT

Intracortical brain-computer interfaces offer superior spatial and temporal resolutions, but face challenges as the increasing number of recording channels introduces high amounts of data to be transferred. This requires power-hungry data serialization and telemetry, leading to potential tissue damage risks. To address this challenge, this paper introduces an event-based neural compressive telemetry (NCT) consisting of 8 channel-rotating Δ-ADCs, an event-driven serializer supporting a proposed ternary address event representation protocol, and an event-based LVDS driver. Leveraging a high sparsity of extracellular spikes and high spatial correlation of the high-density recordings, the proposed NCT achieves a compression ratio of >11.4×, while consumes only 1 µW per channel, which is 127× more efficient than state of the art. The NCT well preserves the spike waveform fidelity, and has a low normalized RMS error <23% even with a spike amplitude down to only 31 µV.

2.
Brain Behav Evol ; 90(1): 41-52, 2017.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28866680

ABSTRACT

Our ability to navigate through the world depends on the function of the hippocampus. This old cortical structure plays a critical role in spatial navigation in mammals and in a variety of processes, including declarative and episodic memory and social behavior. Intense research has revealed much about hippocampal anatomy, physiology, and computation; yet, even intensely studied phenomena such as the shaping of place cell activity or the function of hippocampal firing patterns during sleep remain incompletely understood. Interestingly, while the hippocampus may be a 'higher order' area linked to a complex cortical hierarchy in mammals, it is an old cortical structure in evolutionary terms. The reptilian cortex, structurally much simpler than the mammalian cortex and hippocampus, therefore presents a good alternative model for exploring hippocampal function. Here, we trace common patterns in the evolution of the hippocampus of reptiles and mammals and ask which parts can be profitably compared to understand functional principles. In addition, we describe a selection of the highly diverse repertoire of reptilian behaviors to illustrate the value of a comparative approach towards understanding hippocampal function.


Subject(s)
Biological Evolution , Hippocampus/anatomy & histology , Reptiles/anatomy & histology , Animals , Hippocampus/physiology , Humans , Reptiles/physiology , Spatial Memory/physiology , Spatial Navigation/physiology
3.
Science ; 352(6285): 590-5, 2016 Apr 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27126045

ABSTRACT

Sleep has been described in animals ranging from worms to humans. Yet the electrophysiological characteristics of brain sleep, such as slow-wave (SW) and rapid eye movement (REM) activities, are thought to be restricted to mammals and birds. Recording from the brain of a lizard, the Australian dragon Pogona vitticeps, we identified SW and REM sleep patterns, thus pushing back the probable evolution of these dynamics at least to the emergence of amniotes. The SW and REM sleep patterns that we observed in lizards oscillated continuously for 6 to 10 hours with a period of ~80 seconds. The networks controlling SW-REM antagonism in amniotes may thus originate from a common, ancient oscillator circuit. Lizard SW dynamics closely resemble those observed in rodent hippocampal CA1, yet they originate from a brain area, the dorsal ventricular ridge, that has no obvious hodological similarity with the mammalian hippocampus.


Subject(s)
Brain/physiology , Lizards/physiology , Sleep, REM/physiology , Animals , Biological Evolution , CA1 Region, Hippocampal/physiology
4.
Science ; 345(6198): 814-7, 2014 Aug 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25124440

ABSTRACT

The rules governing the formation of spatial maps in the hippocampus have not been determined. We investigated the large-scale structure of place field activity by recording hippocampal neurons in rats exploring a previously unencountered 48-meter-long track. Single-cell and population activities were well described by a two-parameter stochastic model. Individual neurons had their own characteristic propensity for forming fields randomly along the track, with some cells expressing many fields and many exhibiting few or none. Because of the particular distribution of propensities across cells, the number of neurons with fields scaled logarithmically with track length over a wide, ethological range. These features constrain hippocampal memory mechanisms, may allow efficient encoding of environments and experiences of vastly different extents and durations, and could reflect general principles of population coding.


Subject(s)
CA1 Region, Hippocampal/physiology , Pyramidal Cells/physiology , Space Perception , Action Potentials , Animals , Brain Mapping , CA1 Region, Hippocampal/cytology , Electrodes, Implanted , Exploratory Behavior , Male , Maze Learning , Memory/physiology , Orientation , Poisson Distribution , Rats , Rats, Long-Evans
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