4.5 Article

Physical principles for scalable neural recording

Journal

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fncom.2013.00137

Keywords

neural recording; brain activity mapping; electrical recording; optical methods; magnetic resonance imaging; molecular recording; embedded electronics

Funding

  1. Fannie and John Hertz Foundation fellowship
  2. Thiel Foundation
  3. Chicago Biomedical Consortium
  4. Searle Funds at The Chicago Community Trust
  5. National Institutes of Health (NIH)
  6. National Science Foundation
  7. MIT McGovern Institute and Media Lab
  8. New York Stem Cell Foundation Robertson Investigator Award
  9. Human Frontiers Science Program
  10. Paul Allen Distinguished Investigator in Neuroscience Award
  11. Office of Naval Research
  12. NIH Centers of Excellence in Genomic Science
  13. Miller Research Institute
  14. Burroughs Wellcome Career Award at the Scientific Interface
  15. W.M. Keck Foundation
  16. Directorate For Engineering
  17. Emerging Frontiers & Multidisciplinary Activities [0835878] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Simultaneously measuring the activities of all neurons in a mammalian brain at millisecond resolution is a challenge beyond the limits of existing techniques in neuroscience. Entirely new approaches may be required, motivating an analysis of the fundamental physical constraints on the problem. We outline the physical principles governing brain activity mapping using optical, electrical, magnetic resonance, and molecular modalities of neural recording. Focusing on the mouse brain, we analyze the scalability of each method, concentrating on the limitations imposed by spatiotemporal resolution, energy dissipation, and volume displacement. Based on this analysis, all existing approaches require orders of magnitude improvement in key parameters. Electrical recording is limited by the low multiplexing capacity of electrodes and their lack of intrinsic spatial resolution, optical methods are constrained by the scattering of visible light in braint issue, magnetic resonance is hindered by the diffusion and relaxation timescales of water protons, and the implementation of molecular recording is complicated by the stochastic kinetics of enzymes. Understanding the physical limits of brain activity mapping may provide insight into opportunities for novel solutions. For example, unconventional methods for delivering electrodes may enable unprecedented numbers of recording sites, embedded optical devices could allow optical detectors to be placed within a few scattering lengths of the measured neurons, and new classes of molecularly engineered sensors might obviate cumbersome hardware architectures. We also study the physics of powering and communicating with microscale devices embedded in brain tissue and find that, while radio-frequency electromagnetic data transmission suffers from a severe power-bandwidth tradeoff, communication via infrared light or ultrasound may allow high data rates due to the possibility of spatial multiplexing. The use of embedded local recording and wireless data trasnmission would only be viable, however, given major improvements to the power efficiency of microelectronic devices.

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