Abstract
A variety of electrophysiology tools are available to the neurosurgeon for diagnosis, functional therapy, and neural prosthetics. However, no tool can currently address these three critical needs: (i) access to all cortical regions in a minimally invasive manner; (ii) recordings with microscale, mesoscale, and macroscale resolutions simultaneously; and (iii) access to spatially distant multiple brain regions that constitute distributed cognitive networks. We present a novel device for recording local field potentials (LFPs) with the form factor of a stereo-electroencephalographic electrode but combined with radially positioned microelectrodes and using the lead body to shield LFP sources, enabling directional sensitivity and scalability, referred to as the DISC array. As predicted by our electro-quasistatic models, DISC demonstrated significantly improved signal-to-noise ratio, directional sensitivity, and decoding accuracy from rat barrel cortex recordings during whisker stimulation. Critically, DISC demonstrated equivalent fidelity to conventional electrodes at the macroscale and uniquely, revealed stereoscopic information about current source density. Directional sensitivity of LFPs may significantly improve brain-computer interfaces and many diagnostic procedures, including epilepsy foci detection and deep brain targeting.
Competing Interest Statement
The authors have declared no competing interest.
Footnotes
↵† Co-first authors
Version 2 (Oct 2021): Added the final subjects and more supplemental figures. Version 3 (Jan 2022): Added Extended Data figures and several new figures in the supplemental.