Exploring the valley of death between neural recording and neurostimulation engineering and neurobiology

5th May 2022

Timing : 2 pm EST

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For a list of all talks at the NanoBio seminar Series Spring'22, see here


Science and engineering go hand-in-hand in Neural Engineering. For example, implantable neural microelectrode arrays are important recording and stimulation tools for neuroscience research and have promising clinical applications. However, the intricacies of the biological response after implantation, and their ultimate influences on recording performance and failure, remain challenging to elucidate. We employ in vivo multiphoton imaging and electrophysiology to ask scientific questions on how implantable device design and intervention strategies impact ‘reading from’ and ‘writing to’ the brain, and the system-of-systems interdependence between different cell types in brain injuries and diseases. From an engineering perspective we demonstrate that this research needs to be carried out in parallel with careful evaluation and minimization of sources of errors such as quiescent neurons, electrophysiological artifacts, tissue distortions related to post-mortem processing, and material failure. Together, this talk will discuss utilizing engineering to conduct research at the unexplored frontiers of human knowledge, and in turn, motivate scientifically informed novel engineering.