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Neural Spike Sorting in Hardware: From Theory to Practice

Abstract

Brain-machine interfaces require real-time, wireless signal acquisition systems. However, wireless transmission of raw data is impossible for high-channel-count systems given the power constraints. Data rates could be reduced, thereby enabling wireless data transmission, by performing spike sorting--mapping each recorded action potential to the neuron that generated it--on a DSP at the recording site and transmitting only the sorting results. Our first objective was to design such a DSP. We first developed a standardized dataset and methodology in order to perform an extensive, unbiased comparison of published spike-sorting algorithms to determine which would be most appropriate for hardware implementation. We then considered various implementation issues, such as whether analog or digital spike detection is more efficient and how best to quantize neural signals. This work led to two low-power digital spike-sorting chips.

Our second objective was to provide an offline solution for the research setting that would accelerate the processing of data that has already been recorded using conventional data-acquisition systems. Here, we present an FPGA-based spike-sorting platform that can increase the speed of offline spike sorting by at least 25 times, effectively reducing the time required to sort data from long experiments from several hours to just a few minutes. We attempted to preserve the flexibility of software by implementing several different algorithms in the design, and by providing user control over parameters such as spike detection thresholds.

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