High-density CMOS-based Multielectrode Arrays (MEA) provide thousands of channels to record extracellular electrical activity of neuronal networks. Such a high channels count generates an amount of data that is difficult to manage with long-term fully implantable neural interfaces, where power and data transmission are provided wirelessly. To overcome this limitation, a low resources digital signal processor able to reduce the amount of transmitted data to a relevant subset represented by the spiking activity is essential. Unfortunately, the resources required to detect spikes linearly grow with the number of channels, limiting the total amount of MEA pixels in these devices. This work presents a method, here called Spike Detection-by-Difference (SDD), to drastically reduce this limit, for real-time spike detection with an impact on resources and consumption independent from the total channels count. It exploits the high resolution of MEAs to separate the highly localized extracellular action potential from the large-scale local field potential. The SDD is compared with the standard spike detection approaches as the Threshold Crossing (TC) and the Nonlinear Energy Operator (NEO). The detection accuracy is compared for different spiking amplitudes on a synthetic dataset generated from real recordings, showing a detection accuracy of 90% for spikes as low as 45 µV, with a noise in the frequency band from 300 Hz to 5 kHz of 10 µVrms. Furthermore, the resource consumption shows a reduction of the 91,5% compared to the TC and of 94% compared to the NEO on a 32x32 pixels matrix. This reduction can be further accentuated increasing the matrix size or reducing the number of columns.
Tambaro, M., Vallicelli, E., Saggese, G., La Gala, A., Maschietto, M., Leparulo, A., et al. (2021). A scalable spike detection method for implantable high-density multielectrode array. In SMACD / PRIME 2021 - International Conference on Synthesis, Modeling, Analysis and Simulation Methods and Applications to Circuit Design and 16th Conference on PhD Research in Microelectronics and Electronics (pp.368-371). VDE VERLAG GMBH.
A scalable spike detection method for implantable high-density multielectrode array
Tambaro, M;Vallicelli, EA;La Gala, A;de Matteis, M;Baschirotto, A;
2021
Abstract
High-density CMOS-based Multielectrode Arrays (MEA) provide thousands of channels to record extracellular electrical activity of neuronal networks. Such a high channels count generates an amount of data that is difficult to manage with long-term fully implantable neural interfaces, where power and data transmission are provided wirelessly. To overcome this limitation, a low resources digital signal processor able to reduce the amount of transmitted data to a relevant subset represented by the spiking activity is essential. Unfortunately, the resources required to detect spikes linearly grow with the number of channels, limiting the total amount of MEA pixels in these devices. This work presents a method, here called Spike Detection-by-Difference (SDD), to drastically reduce this limit, for real-time spike detection with an impact on resources and consumption independent from the total channels count. It exploits the high resolution of MEAs to separate the highly localized extracellular action potential from the large-scale local field potential. The SDD is compared with the standard spike detection approaches as the Threshold Crossing (TC) and the Nonlinear Energy Operator (NEO). The detection accuracy is compared for different spiking amplitudes on a synthetic dataset generated from real recordings, showing a detection accuracy of 90% for spikes as low as 45 µV, with a noise in the frequency band from 300 Hz to 5 kHz of 10 µVrms. Furthermore, the resource consumption shows a reduction of the 91,5% compared to the TC and of 94% compared to the NEO on a 32x32 pixels matrix. This reduction can be further accentuated increasing the matrix size or reducing the number of columns.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.