Abstract
.We introduce the design and theoretical analysis of a fiber-optic architecture for neural recording without contrast agents, which transduces neural electrical signals into a multiplexed optical readout. Our sensor design is inspired by electro-optic modulators, which modulate the refractive index of a waveguide by applying a voltage across an electro-optic core material. We estimate that this design would allow recording of the activities of individual neurons located at points along a 10-cm length of optical fiber with axial resolution and sensitivity down to using commercially available optical reflectometers as readout devices. Neural recording sites detect a potential difference against a reference and apply this potential to a capacitor. The waveguide serves as one of the plates of the capacitor, so charge accumulation across the capacitor results in an optical effect. A key concept of the design is that the sensitivity can be improved by increasing the capacitance. To maximize the capacitance, we utilize a microscopic layer of material with high relative permittivity. If suitable materials can be found—possessing high capacitance per unit area as well as favorable properties with respect to toxicity, optical attenuation, ohmic junctions, and surface capacitance—then such sensing fibers could, in principle, be scaled down to few-micron cross-sections for minimally invasive neural interfacing. We study these material requirements and propose potential material choices. Custom-designed multimaterial optical fibers, probed using a reflectometric readout, may, therefore, provide a powerful platform for neural sensing.
Highlights
The extracellular electrode is a classic neural recording technology
Rodriques et al.: Multiplexed neural recording along a single optical fiber via optical reflectometry ideally, the sensing mechanism would rely only on endogenous signals, e.g., electrical or magnetic fields from the firing neurons, rather than imposing a need for exogenously introduced protein or nanoparticle contrast agents
Our proposed architecture is based on two powerful technologies developed by the photonics industry: fiber optic reflectometry, which enables optical fibers to act as distributed sensors,[8,9,10,11] and electro-optic modulators based on the plasma dispersion effect, which generate large changes in the index of refraction of a waveguide in response to relatively small applied voltages.[12,13,14,15,16]
Summary
The extracellular electrode is a classic neural recording technology. The electrode is essentially a conductive wire, insulated except at its tip, placed in the extracellular medium as close as possible to a neuron of interest, where it samples the local voltage relative to a common reference in the brain.[1,2] This extracellular voltage differential is typically on the order of 100 μV in response to an action potential from a nearby neuron[3] and decays over a distance on the order of 100 μm. Rodriques et al.: Multiplexed neural recording along a single optical fiber via optical reflectometry ideally, the sensing mechanism would rely only on endogenous signals, e.g., electrical or magnetic fields from the firing neurons, rather than imposing a need for exogenously introduced protein or nanoparticle contrast agents. Our proposed architecture is based on two powerful technologies developed by the photonics industry: fiber optic reflectometry, which enables optical fibers to act as distributed sensors,[8,9,10,11] and electro-optic modulators based on the plasma dispersion effect, which generate large changes in the index of refraction of a waveguide in response to relatively small applied voltages.[12,13,14,15,16] By combining reflectometry with electrooptic modulation, we propose that it would be possible to do spatially multiplexed neural recording in a single optical fiber
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