Electric stimulation with sinusoids and white noise for neural prostheses

We are investigating the use of novel stimulus waveforms in neural prostheses to determine whether they can provide more precise control over the temporal and spatial pattern of elicited activity as compared to conventional pulsatile stimulation. To study this, we measured the response of retinal ga...

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Main Authors: Daniel K Freeman, Joseph F Rizzo III, Shelley Fried
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2010-02-01
Series:Frontiers in Neuroscience
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/neuro.20.001.2010/full
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spelling doaj-1733fd94fa964e008eeeb730443d908e2020-11-24T20:44:35ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Neuroscience1662-453X2010-02-01410.3389/neuro.20.001.20101281Electric stimulation with sinusoids and white noise for neural prosthesesDaniel K Freeman0Daniel K Freeman1Joseph F Rizzo III2Joseph F Rizzo III3Shelley Fried4Shelley Fried5Boston VA Medical CenterMassachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical SchoolBoston VA Medical CenterMassachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary Boston VA Medical CenterMassachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical SchoolWe are investigating the use of novel stimulus waveforms in neural prostheses to determine whether they can provide more precise control over the temporal and spatial pattern of elicited activity as compared to conventional pulsatile stimulation. To study this, we measured the response of retinal ganglion cells to both sinusoidal and white noise waveforms. The use of cell-attached and whole cell patch clamp recordings allowed the responses to be observed without significant obstruction from the stimulus artifact. Electric stimulation with sinusoids elicited robust responses. White noise analysis was used to derive the linear kernel for the ganglion cell’s spiking response as well as for the underlying excitatory currents. These results suggest that in response to electric stimulation, presynaptic retinal neurons exhibit bandpass filtering characteristics with peak response that occur 25ms after onset. The experimental approach demonstrated here may be useful for studying the temporal response properties of other neurons in the CNS.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/neuro.20.001.2010/fullElectric StimulationNeural ProsthesesRetinal Ganglion Cellswhite noise
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Daniel K Freeman
Daniel K Freeman
Joseph F Rizzo III
Joseph F Rizzo III
Shelley Fried
Shelley Fried
spellingShingle Daniel K Freeman
Daniel K Freeman
Joseph F Rizzo III
Joseph F Rizzo III
Shelley Fried
Shelley Fried
Electric stimulation with sinusoids and white noise for neural prostheses
Frontiers in Neuroscience
Electric Stimulation
Neural Prostheses
Retinal Ganglion Cells
white noise
author_facet Daniel K Freeman
Daniel K Freeman
Joseph F Rizzo III
Joseph F Rizzo III
Shelley Fried
Shelley Fried
author_sort Daniel K Freeman
title Electric stimulation with sinusoids and white noise for neural prostheses
title_short Electric stimulation with sinusoids and white noise for neural prostheses
title_full Electric stimulation with sinusoids and white noise for neural prostheses
title_fullStr Electric stimulation with sinusoids and white noise for neural prostheses
title_full_unstemmed Electric stimulation with sinusoids and white noise for neural prostheses
title_sort electric stimulation with sinusoids and white noise for neural prostheses
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Neuroscience
issn 1662-453X
publishDate 2010-02-01
description We are investigating the use of novel stimulus waveforms in neural prostheses to determine whether they can provide more precise control over the temporal and spatial pattern of elicited activity as compared to conventional pulsatile stimulation. To study this, we measured the response of retinal ganglion cells to both sinusoidal and white noise waveforms. The use of cell-attached and whole cell patch clamp recordings allowed the responses to be observed without significant obstruction from the stimulus artifact. Electric stimulation with sinusoids elicited robust responses. White noise analysis was used to derive the linear kernel for the ganglion cell’s spiking response as well as for the underlying excitatory currents. These results suggest that in response to electric stimulation, presynaptic retinal neurons exhibit bandpass filtering characteristics with peak response that occur 25ms after onset. The experimental approach demonstrated here may be useful for studying the temporal response properties of other neurons in the CNS.
topic Electric Stimulation
Neural Prostheses
Retinal Ganglion Cells
white noise
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/neuro.20.001.2010/full
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