Chronically implanted hyperdrive for cortical recording and optogenetic control in behaving mice. Siegle, J. H., Carlen, M., Meletis, K., Li-Huei Tsai, Moore, C. I., & Ritt, J. In 2011 Annual International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society, pages 7529–7532, Boston, MA, August, 2011. IEEE.
Chronically implanted hyperdrive for cortical recording and optogenetic control in behaving mice [link]Paper  doi  abstract   bibtex   
Neural stimulation technology has undergone a revolutionary advance with the introduction of light sensitive ion channels and pumps into genetically identified subsets of cells. To exploit this technology, it is necessary to incorporate optical elements into traditional electrophysiology devices. Here we describe the design, construction and use of a "hyperdrive" capable of simultaneous electrical recordings and optical stimulation. The device consists of multiple microdrives for moving electrodes independently and a stationary fiber for delivering light to the tissue surrounding the electrodes. We present data demonstrating the effectiveness of inhibitory recruitment via optical stimulation and its interaction with physiological and behavioral states, determined by electrophysiological recording and videographic monitoring.
@inproceedings{siegle_chronically_2011,
	address = {Boston, MA},
	title = {Chronically implanted hyperdrive for cortical recording and optogenetic control in behaving mice},
	isbn = {978-1-4577-1589-1 978-1-4244-4121-1 978-1-4244-4122-8},
	url = {http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/6091856/},
	doi = {10.1109/IEMBS.2011.6091856},
	abstract = {Neural stimulation technology has undergone a revolutionary advance with the introduction of light sensitive ion channels and pumps into genetically identified subsets of cells. To exploit this technology, it is necessary to incorporate optical elements into traditional electrophysiology devices. Here we describe the design, construction and use of a "hyperdrive" capable of simultaneous electrical recordings and optical stimulation. The device consists of multiple microdrives for moving electrodes independently and a stationary fiber for delivering light to the tissue surrounding the electrodes. We present data demonstrating the effectiveness of inhibitory recruitment via optical stimulation and its interaction with physiological and behavioral states, determined by electrophysiological recording and videographic monitoring.},
	urldate = {2020-03-12},
	booktitle = {2011 {Annual} {International} {Conference} of the {IEEE} {Engineering} in {Medicine} and {Biology} {Society}},
	publisher = {IEEE},
	author = {Siegle, J. H. and Carlen, M. and Meletis, K. and {Li-Huei Tsai} and Moore, C. I. and Ritt, J.},
	month = aug,
	year = {2011},
	pages = {7529--7532}
}

Downloads: 0