4.5 Article

Measuring neuronal activity with diffuse correlation spectroscopy: a theoretical investigation

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NEUROPHOTONICS
卷 8, 期 3, 页码 -

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SPIE-SOC PHOTO-OPTICAL INSTRUMENTATION ENGINEERS
DOI: 10.1117/1.NPh.8.3.035004

关键词

diffuse correlation spectroscopy; Monte Carlo; neuronal activation; neuronal cell motion; hemodynamics

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  1. Facebook, Inc.

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The study aims to characterize DCS signal variation in detecting neuronal cell activity on fast and slow timescales. Through Monte Carlo simulations, it was found that neuronal cell motion induces DCS signal changes, but based on current technology trends, the detection of neuronal cell motion using DCS is not expected in the near future.
Significance: Diffuse correlation spectroscopy (DCS) measures cerebral blood flow non-invasively. Variations in blood flow can be used to detect neuronal activities, but its peak has a latency of a few seconds, which is slow for real-time monitoring. Neuronal cells also deform during activation, which, in principle, can be utilized to detect neuronal activity on fast time-scales (within 100 ms) using DCS. Aims: We aim to characterize DCS signal variation quantified as the change of the decay time of the speckle intensity autocorrelation function during neuronal activation on both fast (within 100 ms) and slow (100 ms to seconds) timescales. Approach: We extensively modeled the variations in the DCS signal that are expected to arise from neuronal activation using Monte Carlo simulations, including the impacts of neuronal cell motion, vessel wall dilation, and blood flow changes. Results: We found that neuronal cell motion induces a DCS signal variation of similar to 10(-5). We also estimated the contrast and number of channels required to detect hemodynamic signals at different time delays. Conclusions: From this extensive analysis, we do not expect to detect neuronal cell motion using DCS in the near future based on current technology trends. However, multi-channel DCS will be able to detect hemodynamic response with sub-second latency, which is interesting for brain-computer interfaces. (C) The Authors. Published by SPIE under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Unported License.

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