Abstract

BackgroundHuman intracranial microwire recordings allow measurement of neuronal activity in human subjects at a fine temporal and spatial scale. The recorded extracellular potentials represent a mixture of action potentials from nearby neurons, local field potentials, and other noise sources. Signal processing of these recordings is used to separate the activity of putative single neurons from other background and noise. To better understand the separation of single neuron activity, one approach is to simulate the signals produced by neurons firing action potentials combined with background activity and noise. New methodThis paper characterizes the background activity and noise in human intracranial microwire recordings and presents an accurate and efficient method of simulation using an infinite impulse response filter to color white noise. Results and comparisonThis method reproduces the power spectral density of the background activity and noise over a frequency range of 1–5000 Hz and is over 200 times faster than previously used methods. It thus facilitates large scale studies of variation of noise sources, field potentials, and processing parameters. It performs equivalently in terms of spike sorting to simulation using white noise. Another advantage is that the simulated signals are known to arise from a pseudorandom number generator and cannot be the result of detecting simulated background spiking activity. ConclusionsThis approach provides a rapid and accurate method of simulating background noise and neural activity in human intracranial microwire recordings. It is suitable for use in large scale simulations to study spike sorting in this type of recording.

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