Journal of Low Power Electronics and Applications (Sep 2012)

A Multi-Channel Low-Power System-on-Chip for in Vivo Recording and Wireless Transmission of Neural Spikes

  • Alessandro Sottocornola Spinelli,
  • Emma Maggiolini,
  • Marianna Semprini,
  • Alessandro Vato,
  • Gian Nicola Angotzi,
  • Gytis Baranauskas,
  • Riccardo Gusmeroli,
  • Guido Zambra,
  • Maria Ceravolo,
  • Andrea Bonfanti,
  • Andrea Leonardo Lacaita

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jlpea2040211
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 4
pp. 211 – 241

Abstract

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This paper reports a multi-channel neural spike recording system-on-chip with digital data compression and wireless telemetry. The circuit consists of 16 amplifiers, an analog time-division multiplexer, a single 8 bit analog-to-digital converter, a digital signal compression unit and a wireless transmitter. Although only 16 amplifiers are integrated in our current die version, the whole system is designed to work with 64, demonstrating the feasibility of a digital processing and narrowband wireless transmission of 64 neural recording channels. Compression of the raw data is achieved by detecting the action potentials (APs) and storing 20 samples for each spike waveform. This compression method retains sufficiently high data quality to allow for single neuron identification (spike sorting). The 400 MHz transmitter employs a Manchester-Coded Frequency Shift Keying (MC-FSK) modulator with low modulation index. In this way, a 1:25 Mbit/s data rate is delivered within a limited band of about 3 MHz. The chip is realized in a 0:35 m AMS CMOS process featuring a 3 V power supply with an area of 3:1 2:7 mm2. The achieved transmission range is over 10 m with an overall power consumption for 64 channels of 17:2 mW. This figure translates into a power budget of 269 W per channel, in line with published results but allowing a larger transmission distance and more efficient bandwidth occupation of the wireless link. The integrated circuit was mounted on a small and light board to be used during neuroscience experiments with freely-behaving rats. Powered by 2 AAA batteries, the system can continuously work for more than 100 hours allowing for long-lasting neural spike recordings.

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