학술논문

A 16-Channel Neural Recording System-on-Chip With CHT Feature Extraction Processor in 65-nm CMOS
Document Type
Periodical
Source
IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits IEEE J. Solid-State Circuits Solid-State Circuits, IEEE Journal of. 57(9):2752-2763 Sep, 2022
Subject
Components, Circuits, Devices and Systems
Engineered Materials, Dielectrics and Plasmas
Computing and Processing
Feature extraction
System-on-chip
Wireless communication
Transforms
Wireless sensor networks
Receivers
Hardware
Compressed Hadamard transform (CHT)
implantable system-on-chip (SoC)
machine learning (ML)
neural recording
resource efficiency
seizure detection
spreading depolarization (SD)
wireless power and data transfer (WPDT)
Language
ISSN
0018-9200
1558-173X
Abstract
Next-generation invasive neural interfaces require fully implantable wireless systems that can record from a large number of channels simultaneously. However, transferring the recorded data from the implant to an external receiver emerges as a significant challenge due to the high throughput. To address this challenge, this article presents a neural recording system-on-chip that achieves high resource and wireless bandwidth efficiency by employing on-chip feature extraction. Energy–area-efficient 10-bit 20-kS/s front end amplifies and digitizes the neural signals within the local field potential (LFP) and action potential (AP) bands. The raw data from each channel are decomposed into spectral features using a compressed Hadamard transform (CHT) processor. The selection of the features to be computed is tailored through a machine learning algorithm such that the overall data rate is reduced by 80% without compromising classification performance. Moreover, the CHT feature extractor allows waveform reconstruction on the receiver side for monitoring or additional post-processing. The proposed approach was validated through in vivo and off-line experiments. The prototype fabricated in 65-nm CMOS also includes wireless power and data receiver blocks to demonstrate the energy and area efficiency of the complete system. The overall signal chain consumes 2.6 $\mu \text{W}$ and occupies 0.021 mm 2 per channel, pointing toward its feasibility for 1000-channel single-die neural recording systems.