Optical magnetic detection of single-neuron action potentials using quantum defects in diamond
J. F. Barry, M. J. Turner, J. M. Schloss, D. R. Glenn, Y. Song, M. D., Lukin, H. Park, R. L. Walsworth

TL;DR
This paper introduces a noninvasive, label-free magnetic sensing technique using nitrogen-vacancy diamond sensors to detect single-neuron action potentials with high spatial and temporal resolution, applicable in opaque tissues and live organisms.
Contribution
The authors develop and demonstrate a novel NV diamond-based magnetic detection method for single-neuron action potentials, enabling noninvasive, real-time neural activity mapping.
Findings
Successfully detected AP magnetic fields from single neurons in vitro.
Extended the technique to live, opaque marine worms without adverse effects.
Achieved high-resolution, real-time neural activity monitoring.
Abstract
A key challenge for neuroscience is noninvasive, label-free sensing of action potential (AP) dynamics in whole organisms with single-neuron resolution. Here, we present a new approach to this problem: using nitrogen-vacancy (NV) quantum defects in diamond to measure the time-dependent magnetic fields produced by single-neuron APs. Our technique has a unique combination of features: (i) it is noninvasive, as the light that probes the NV sensors stays within the biocompatible diamond chip and does not enter the organism, enabling activity monitoring over extended periods; (ii) it is label-free and should be widely applicable to most organisms; (iii) it provides high spatial and temporal resolution, allowing precise measurement of the AP waveforms and conduction velocities of individual neurons; (iv) it directly determines AP propagation direction through the inherent sensitivity of NVs to…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
