Abstract

Objective. Stimulation of neural activity is an important scientific and clinical tool, causally testing hypotheses and treating neurodegenerative and neuropsychiatric diseases. However, current stimulation approaches cannot flexibly control the pattern of activity in populations of neurons. To address this, we developed a model-free, adaptive, closed-loop stimulation (ACLS) system that learns to use multi-site electrical stimulation to control the pattern of activity of a population of neurons. Approach. The ACLS system combined multi-electrode electrophysiological recordings with multi-site electrical stimulation to simultaneously record the activity of a population of 5–15 multiunit neurons and deliver spatially-patterned electrical stimulation across 4–16 sites. Using a closed-loop learning system, ACLS iteratively updated the pattern of stimulation to reduce the difference between the observed neural response and a specific target pattern of firing rates in the recorded multiunits. Main results. In silico and in vivo experiments showed ACLS learns to produce specific patterns of neural activity (in ∼15 min) and was robust to noise and drift in neural responses. In visual cortex of awake mice, ACLS learned electrical stimulation patterns that produced responses similar to the natural response evoked by visual stimuli. Similar to how repetition of a visual stimulus causes an adaptation in the neural response, the response to electrical stimulation was adapted when it was preceded by the associated visual stimulus. Significance. Our results show an ACLS system that can learn, in real-time, to generate specific patterns of neural activity. This work provides a framework for using model-free closed-loop learning to control neural activity.

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