• IEEE Trans Neural Syst Rehabil Eng · Aug 2009

    A 128-channel 6 mW wireless neural recording IC with spike feature extraction and UWB transmitter.

    • Moo Sung Chae, Zhi Yang, Mehmet R Yuce, Linh Hoang, and Wentai Liu.
    • Electrical Engineering Department, University of California-Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz, CA 95064, USA. gomdori07@gmail.com
    • IEEE Trans Neural Syst Rehabil Eng. 2009 Aug 1; 17 (4): 312-21.

    AbstractThis paper reports a 128-channel neural recording integrated circuit (IC) with on-the-fly spike feature extraction and wireless telemetry. The chip consists of eight 16-channel front-end recording blocks, spike detection and feature extraction digital signal processor (DSP), ultra wideband (UWB) transmitter, and on-chip bias generators. Each recording channel has amplifiers with programmable gain and bandwidth to accommodate different types of biological signals. An analog-to-digital converter (ADC) shared by 16 amplifiers through time-multiplexing results in a balanced trade-off between the power consumption and chip area. A nonlinear energy operator (NEO) based spike detector is implemented for identifying spikes, which are further processed by a digital frequency-shaping filter. The computationally efficient spike detection and feature extraction algorithms attribute to an auspicious DSP implementation on-chip. UWB telemetry is designed to wirelessly transfer raw data from 128 recording channels at a data rate of 90 Mbit/s. The chip is realized in 0.35 mum complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) process with an area of 8.8 x 7.2 mm(2) and consumes 6 mW by employing a sequential turn-on architecture that selectively powers off idle analog circuit blocks. The chip has been tested for electrical specifications and verified in an ex vivo biological environment.

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