作者
Saehyuck Oh,Janghwan Jekal,Jinyoung Won,Kyung Seob Lim,Chang‐Yeop Jeon,Junghyung Park,Hyeon-Gu Yeo,Yu Gyeong Kim,Young Hee Lee,Leslie Jaesun Ha,Han Hee Jung,Junwoo Yea,Hyeokjun Lee,Jeongdae Ha,Jin‐Mo Kim,Doyoung Lee,Soojeong Song,Jieun Son,Tae Sang Yu,Jungmin Lee,Sanghoon Lee,Jaehong Lee,Bong Hoon Kim,Ji‐Woong Choi,Jong‐Cheol Rah,Young Min Song,Jae‐Woong Jeong,Hyung Jin Choi,Sheng Xu,Youngjeon Lee,Kyung‐In Jang
摘要
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. A stealthy neural recorder allows for the study of the behaviour of non-human primates in naturalistic settings.