Title :
Neural Recording Front-End Designs for Fully Implantable Neuroscience Applications and Neural Prosthetic Microsystems
Author :
Perlin, G.E. ; Sodagar, A.M. ; Wise, K.D.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng. & Comput. Sci., Michigan Univ., Ann Arbor, MI
fDate :
Aug. 30 2006-Sept. 3 2006
Abstract :
An implantable neural recording front-end has been designed in two versions. The first is a multi-channel signal-conditioning ASIC for use with any neural recording probe technology. This ASIC was implemented in a commercial 0.5 mum CMOS process, includes 16 parallel amplifier channels, and measures 2.3 mm2 The amplifiers have a gain of 59.5 dB, a high cutoff frequency at 9.1 kHz and consume 75 muW per channel. The low cutoff frequency is independently tunable on each channel to accept or reject field potentials. This chip is small enough to be chronically packaged for experiments in awake behaving animals or it can be integrated into a fully implantable neural recording microsystem. The second version of the front-end is a neural recording probe with integrated signal conditioning circuitry on the back-end implemented in a 3 mum CMOS process. This version dissipates 142 muW and includes 64 to 8 site selection, 8 per-channel amplifiers each having a gain of 50.2 dB, a tunable low cutoff frequency, and a 7 kHz upper cutoff frequency. Real-time site impedance and circuit testing has been integrated in this design
Keywords :
application specific integrated circuits; bioelectric potentials; biomedical electrodes; medical signal processing; neurophysiology; prosthetics; signal processing equipment; 142 muW; 50.2 dB; 59.5 dB; 7 kHz; 75 muW; 9.1 kHz; ASIC; CMOS process; circuit testing; implantable neural recording front-end; integrated signal conditioning circuitry; multi-channel signal-conditioning; neural prosthetic microsystem; neural recording probe technology; parallel amplifier channel; real-time site impedance; Application specific integrated circuits; CMOS process; CMOS technology; Cutoff frequency; Frequency measurement; Gain; Neuroscience; Probes; Prosthetics; Tunable circuits and devices; Neural recording amplifiers; microsystems; neural probes; neural prosthetics;
Conference_Titel :
Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society, 2006. EMBS '06. 28th Annual International Conference of the IEEE
Conference_Location :
New York, NY
Print_ISBN :
1-4244-0032-5
Electronic_ISBN :
1557-170X
DOI :
10.1109/IEMBS.2006.260193