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Title
A stealthy neural recorder for the study of behaviour in primates
Issued Date
2025-06
Citation
Oh, Saehyuck. (2025-06). A stealthy neural recorder for the study of behaviour in primates. Nature Biomedical Engineering, 9(6), 882–895. doi: 10.1038/s41551-024-01280-w
Type
Article
Keywords
CIRCUITSSTIMULATIONINJECTIONNEURONSSYSTEMSMODELLATERAL HYPOTHALAMUSSILICON PROBESBRAIN ACTIVITYWIRELESS
ISSN
2157-846X
Abstract
By monitoring brain neural signals, neural recorders allow for the study of neurological mechanisms underlying specific behavioural and cognitive states. However, the large brain volumes of non-human primates and their extensive range of uncontrolled movements and inherent wildness make it difficult to carry out covert and long-term recording and analysis of deep-brain neural signals. Here we report the development and performance of a stealthy neural recorder for the study of naturalistic behaviours in non-human primates. The neural recorder includes a fully implantable wireless and battery-free module for the recording of local field potentials and accelerometry data in real time, a flexible 32-electrode neural probe with a resorbable insertion shuttle, and a repeater coil-based wireless-power-transfer system operating at the body scale. We used the device to record neurobehavioural data for over 1 month in a freely moving monkey and leveraged the recorded data to train an artificial intelligence model for the classification of the animals’ eating behaviours. © The Author(s) 2024.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11750/57332
DOI
10.1038/s41551-024-01280-w
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
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이상훈
Lee, Sanghoon이상훈

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