The team anticipates that experiments using probes based on their design could lead to breakthroughs in understanding and treating neurological diseases such as Alzheimer’s.
«This is a very big step forward," said Kensall Wise, the William Gould Dow Distinguished University Professor Emeritus, who was involved with the research. «The fact that you can generate these optical signals on the probe, in a living brain, opens up new doors.»
A network of around 100 billion neurons power the human brain, and figuring out how they work together is a monumental and important task, the researchers say.
«Hundreds of millions of people suffer from neurological diseases, but treatment methods and drugs are currently very limited because scientific understanding of the brain is lacking," said Fan Wu, a postdoctoral researcher in electrical engineering and computer sciences and
In genetically modified rodents, neurons can be turned on and off with light. Typically, neuroscientists using this «optogenetics» technique shine light on a region of the brain through implanted optical fibers and record the response with a second device. This helps to reveal which regions of the brain are responsible for which behaviors. But it can’t reveal how the neurons communicate with one another.
The new probes can. Each probe array contains 12 LEDs and 32 electrodes. The micro LEDs are as small as a neuron’s cell body, so they can turn single neurons on and off. Meanwhile, the microelectrodes measure activity at the
«Now we can know how a group of cells, both adjacent and farther away, are responding to the activation of a single cell," Wu said. «This will help us better understand how these cells are communicating with each other.»
While the probes were made at
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The research is described in the paper, «Monolithically Integrated μLEDs on Silicon Neural Probes for