Szczegóły publikacji

Opis bibliograficzny

What does the eye tell the brain?: development of a system for the large-scale recording of retinal output activity / A. M. Lithe, [et al.], W. DĄBROWSKI, A. A. Grillo, M. Grivich, P. GRYBOŚ, P. HOTTOWY, [et al.] // IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science ; ISSN 0018-9499. — 2004 — vol. 51 no. 4, s. 1434–1440. — Bibliogr. s. 1440, Abstr. — Nuclear Science Symposium/Medical Imaging Conference/13th International Workshop on Room-Temperature Semiconductor X-and Gamma-Ray Dectectors/Symposium on Nuclear Power Systems : Portland, USA, October 19–25, 2003

Autorzy (15)

Słowa kluczowe

visual systemneural networksbiomedical electrodesimage processinganalog integrated circuits

Dane bibliometryczne

ID BaDAP20926
Data dodania do BaDAP2005-03-18
Tekst źródłowyURL
DOI10.1109/TNS.2004.832706
Rok publikacji2004
Typ publikacjireferat w czasopiśmie
Otwarty dostęptak
Czasopismo/seriaIEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science

Abstract

A multielectrode array system has been developed to study how the retina processes and encodes visual images. This system can simultaneously record the extracellular electrical activity from hundreds of retinal output neurons as a dynamic visual image is focused on the input neurons. The retinal output signals detected can be correlated with the visual input to study the neural code used by the eye to send information about the visual world to the brain. The system consists of the following components: 1) a 32 x 16 rectangular array of 512 planar microelectrodes with a sensitive area of 1.7 mm(2); the electrode spacing is 60 mum and the electrode diameter is 5 mum (hexagonal arrays with 519 electrodes are under development); 2) eight 64-channel custom-designed integrated circuits to platinize the electrodes and ac couple the signals; 3) eight 64-channel integrated circuits to amplify, band-pass filter, and analog multiplex the signals; 4) a data acquisition system; and 5) data processing software. This paper will describe the design of the system, the experimental and data analysis techniques, and some first results with live retina. The system is based on techniques and expertise acquired in the development of silicon microstrip detectors for high-energy physics experiments.

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#20925Data dodania: 18.3.2005
What does the eye tell the brain?: development of a system for the large scale recording of retinal output activity / A. M. Litke, [et al.], W. DĄBROWSKI, [et al.], P. GRYBOŚ, P. HOTTOWY, [et al.] // W: 2003 IEEE nuclear science symposium : Portland, USA, 19–25 October 2003, Pt. 2 / IEEE. — [New York : The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers], [2004]. — ISBN: 0-7803-8257-9. — S. 951–955. — Bibliogr. s. 955, Abstr.
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#35959Data dodania: 13.12.2007
What does the eye tell the brain?: development of a system for the large scale recording of retinal output activity / A. M. Litke, [et al.], W. DĄBROWSKI, [et al.], P. GRYBOŚ, P. HOTTOWY, [et al.] // W: Nuclear science symposium ; Medical imaging conference : 13th international workshop on Room-temperature semiconductor X- and gamma-ray detectors : [Portland, USA, 19–25 October 2003] : abstracts / IEEE, NPSS Nuclear & Plasma Sciences Society. — [New York : IEEE], [2003]. — S. 61, N30-4