학술논문

Surface multipoint microelectrode for direct recording of auditory evoked potentials on the auditory cortex of a rat
Document Type
Conference
Source
1st Annual International IEEE-EMBS Special Topic Conference on Microtechnologies in Medicine and Biology. Proceedings (Cat. No.00EX451) Microtechnologies in medicine and biology Microtechnologies in Medicine and Biology, 1st Annual International, Conference On. 2000. :512-517 2000
Subject
Components, Circuits, Devices and Systems
Bioengineering
Microelectrodes
Prosthetics
Electrodes
Deafness
Acoustic devices
Spatiotemporal phenomena
Guidelines
Rats
Animals
Electrical stimulation
Language
Abstract
Stimulation of the cochlear nucleus has been used for rehabilitation of deafened patients with bilateral acoustic neuromas, but current prosthetic devices bring few benefits. The goals of the authors' study are to develop such a system that could provide neuronal data with a high spatiotemporal resolution, reveal auditory pathway functions, and develop efficient guidelines for designing prostheses. Here, the authors propose and fabricate the surface microelectrode for direct cortical recordings, which is flexible enough to stick onto the cortex and consists of 32 recording sites on 2-mm square area. In addition, the spike microelectrode array, in which four microelectrodes are aligned at even intervals of 400 /spl mu/m, was developed, and used for micro-stimulation of the cochlear nucleus. The system using these electrodes was developed and its feasibility was shown on rats' animal experiments. In the experiments, the authors show that the surface electrode can provide high-resolution data of cortical activities elicited by both acoustic and electrical stimulation and can demonstrate the functional stimulation of the spike microelectrode array.