An ultrathin electrode spun from a single carbon fiber can record neurons in living animals.
Connecting a human brain to a computer is as much a materials science
problem as a biology one. What kind of interface is delicate enough not
to damage nerve tissue, but resilient enough to last decades?
Researchers
have come up with what they call a “stealthy neural interface” made
from a single carbon fiber and coated with chemicals to make it
resistant to proteins in the brain.
The new microthread electrode, designed to pick up signals
from a single neuron as it fires, is only about 7 micrometers in
diameter. That is the thinnest yet developed, and about 100 times as
thin as the conventional metal electrodes widely used to study animal
brains.
“We wanted to see if we could radically change implant technology,” says Takashi Kozai, a researcher at the University of Pittsburgh and the lead author on the paper, published today in the journal Nature Materials. “We want to see an electrode that lasts 70 years.”
Researchers
need long-lasting electrodes in order to improve brain-machine
interfaces. These systems, in preliminary studies, have allowed
paralyzed people to control robotic limbs or a computer mouse. By using
electrodes to record the firing of individual brain cells, scientists
have learned to decode these signals as representing the movement of a
rat’s whiskers or a quadriplegic’s effort to move his arms (see “Monkey Thinks Robot into Action”).
“This was a nice demonstration that these fibers could be insulated [and] coated with an effective recording surface,” says Andrew Schwartz,
another brain-machine interface researcher at the University of
Pittsburgh who was not involved with the work. He cautions, however,
that it could be difficult to insert such fine, flexible electrodes into
brain tissue, and to secure them. Schwartz notes that recordings broke
down in many of the animals studied.
Schwartz says it’s widely
believed small fibers are “a good thing, because they seem to be
‘ignored’ by the brain.” Conventional electrodes stop recording after a
couple of years as scar tissue builds around them. To improve the
electrode’s performance, the researchers also coated its tip with a
polymer that helps it pick up an electrical signal.
In experiments being carried out with human volunteers,
Schwartz has used a 15-year-old technology called the Utah array, a
rigid array of around 100 metal electrodes that is about the size of the
“Q” on a computer keyboard (see “New Brain Machine Interfaces”).
The
latest work, done in the University of Michigan’s Neural Engineering
lab, was led by Daryl Kipke, a researcher who is also CEO of a company, NeuroNexus, that sells neural recording equipment. Kipke said a patent application had been filed on the work.
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