A Reconfigurable Nanophotonics Platform for Sub-Millisecond, Deep Brain Neural Stimulation
Aseema Mohanty, Qian Li, Mohammad Amin Tadayon, Gaurang Bhatt, Euijae, Shim, Xingchen Ji, Jaime Cardenas, Steven A. Miller, Adam Kepecs, and Michal, Lipson

TL;DR
This paper introduces a reconfigurable nanophotonic platform operating in the visible spectrum, enabling precise, rapid optical stimulation and recording of neurons in deep brain regions with sub-millisecond timing.
Contribution
It presents the first implantable, reconfigurable nanophotonic device for in vivo neural stimulation and recording in the brain, scalable and robust for future neural interface technologies.
Findings
Demonstrated in vivo neural stimulation with sub-millisecond precision
Achieved rapid switching and routing of optical beams in brain tissue
Showed scalability and robustness of the nanophotonic device
Abstract
Nanophotonics provides the ability to rapidly and precisely reconfigure light beams on a compact platform. Infrared nanophotonic devices are widely used in data communications to overcome traditional bandwidth limitations of electrical interconnects. Nanophotonic devices also hold promise for use in biological applications that require visible light, but this has remained technically elusive due to the challenges of reconfiguring and guiding light at these smaller dimensions. In neuroscience, for example, there is a need for implantable optical devices to optogenetically stimulate neurons across deep brain regions with the speed and precision matching state-of-the-art recording probes. Here we demonstrate the first platform for reconfigurable nanophotonic devices in the visible wavelength range and show its application in vivo in the brain. We demonstrate an implantable probe endowed…
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