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      A review of electrodes for the electrical brain signal recording

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      Biomedical Engineering Letters
      Springer Nature

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          Receptive fields of single neurones in the cat's striate cortex

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            Electric Fields of the Brain

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              Ultrasmall implantable composite microelectrodes with bioactive surfaces for chronic neural interfaces.

              Implantable neural microelectrodes that can record extracellular biopotentials from small, targeted groups of neurons are critical for neuroscience research and emerging clinical applications including brain-controlled prosthetic devices. The crucial material-dependent problem is developing microelectrodes that record neural activity from the same neurons for years with high fidelity and reliability. Here, we report the development of an integrated composite electrode consisting of a carbon-fibre core, a poly(p-xylylene)-based thin-film coating that acts as a dielectric barrier and that is functionalized to control intrinsic biological processes, and a poly(thiophene)-based recording pad. The resulting implants are an order of magnitude smaller than traditional recording electrodes, and more mechanically compliant with brain tissue. They were found to elicit much reduced chronic reactive tissue responses and enabled single-neuron recording in acute and early chronic experiments in rats. This technology, taking advantage of new composites, makes possible highly selective and stealthy neural interface devices towards realizing long-lasting implants.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Biomedical Engineering Letters
                Biomed. Eng. Lett.
                Springer Nature
                2093-9868
                2093-985X
                August 2016
                September 21 2017
                : 6
                : 3
                : 104-112
                Article
                10.1007/s13534-016-0235-1
                5df54d20-192a-4024-bd38-cd79b2402ce5
                © 2017

                http://www.springer.com/tdm

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