Title
24.1 A miniaturized 64-channel 225μW wireless electrocorticographic neural sensor
Abstract
Substantial improvements in neural-implant longevity are needed to transition brain-machine interface (BMI) systems from research labs to clinical practice. While action potential (AP) recording through penetrating electrode arrays offers the highest spatial resolution, it comes at the price of tissue scarring, resulting in signal degradation over the course of several months [1]. Electrocorticography (ECoG) is an electrophysiological technique where electrical potentials are recorded from the surface of the cerebral cortex, reducing cortical scarring. However, today's clinical ECoG implants are large, have low spatial resolution (0.4 to 1cm) and offer only wired operation.
Year
DOI
Venue
2014
10.1109/ISSCC.2014.6757492
Solid-State Circuits Conference Digest of Technical Papers
Keywords
DocType
ISSN
bioelectric potentials,biological tissues,biomedical electrodes,biomedical transducers,brain,prosthetics,sensor arrays,wireless sensor networks,ap recording,bmi system,ecog implant,action potential recording,brain-machine interface system,cerebral cortex,cortical scarring reduction,electrical potential,electrode array,electrophysiological technique,miniaturized 64-channel wireless electrocorticographic neural sensor,neural-implant longevity,power 225 muw,signal degradation,tissue scarring
Conference
0193-6530
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
3
0.98
2
Authors
11
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Rikky Muller18712.53
Hanh-Phuc Le233741.77
Wen Li3572.95
Peter Ledochowitsch4675.50
Simone Gambini529431.64
Toni Björninen69714.77
aaron c koralek730.98
Jose M. Carmena824735.30
Michel M Maharbiz98820.12
Elad Alon10912121.97
Jan M. Rabaey1147961049.96