35 results on '"Tchoe Y"'
Search Results
2. RADIOBIOLOGY. PART IV
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Tchoe, Y
- Published
- 1963
3. RADIOBIOLOGY. PART VIII
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Tchoe, Y
- Published
- 1963
4. RADIOBIOLOGY. PART XI
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Tchoe, Y
- Published
- 1964
5. HIGHLY RADIOACTIVE FALLOUT PARTICLES INGESTED BY MICE.
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Tchoe, Y
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- 1966
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6. RADIOBIOLOGY. PART IX
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Tchoe, Y
- Published
- 1964
7. Syllable processing is organized in discrete subregions of the human superior temporal gyrus.
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Cleary DR, Tchoe Y, Bourhis A, Dickey CW, Stedelin B, Ganji M, Lee SH, Lee J, Siler DA, Brown EC, Rosen BQ, Kaestner E, Yang JC, Soper DJ, Han SJ, Paulk AC, Cash SS, Raslan AM, Dayeh SA, and Halgren E
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- Humans, Adult, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Brain Mapping methods, Language, Acoustic Stimulation, Temporal Lobe physiology, Speech Perception physiology
- Abstract
Modular organization at approximately 1 mm scale could be fundamental to cortical processing, but its presence in human association cortex is unknown. Using custom-built, high-density electrode arrays placed on the cortical surface of 7 patients undergoing awake craniotomy for tumor excision, we investigated receptive speech processing in the left (dominant) human posterior superior temporal gyrus. Responses to consonant-vowel syllables and noise-vocoded controls recorded with 1,024 channel micro-grids at 200 μm pitch demonstrated roughly circular domains approximately 1.7 mm in diameter, with sharp boundaries observed in 128 channel linear arrays at 50 μm pitch, possibly consistent with a columnar organization. Peak latencies to syllables in different modules were bimodally distributed centered at 252 and 386 ms. Adjacent modules were sharply delineated from each other by their distinct time courses and stimulus selectivity. We suggest that receptive language cortex may be organized in discrete processing modules., Competing Interests: SD and AR have equity in a startup company (Intelecterra). SC has a financial interest in an unrelated company (Beacon Biosignals). No other authors report competing interests., (Copyright: This is an open access article, free of all copyright, and may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose. The work is made available under the Creative Commons CC0 public domain dedication.)
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- 2024
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8. Low-Power Fully Integrated 256-Channel Nanowire Electrode-on-Chip Neural Interface for Intracellular Electrophysiology.
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Wang J, Liu R, Tchoe Y, Buccino AP, Paul A, Pre D, D'Antonio-Chronowska A, Kelly FA, Bang AG, Kim C, Dayeh S, and Cauwenberghs G
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Intracellular electrophysiology, a vital and versatile technique in cellular neuroscience, is typically conducted using the patch-clamp method. Despite its effectiveness, this method poses challenges due to its complexity and low throughput. The pursuit of multi-channel parallel neural intracellular recording has been a long-standing goal, yet achieving reliable and consistent scaling has been elusive because of several technological barriers. In this work, we introduce a micropower integrated circuit, optimized for scalable, high-throughput in vitro intrinsically intracellular electrophysiology. This system is capable of simultaneous recording and stimulation, implementing all essential functions such as signal amplification, acquisition, and control, with a direct interface to electrodes integrated on the chip. The electrophysiology system-on-chip (eSoC), fabricated in 180nm CMOS, measures 2.236 mm × 2.236 mm. It contains four 8 × 8 arrays of nanowire electrodes, each with a 50 μm pitch, placed over the top-metal layer on the chip surface, totaling 256 channels. Each channel has a power consumption of 0.47 μW, suitable for current stimulation and voltage recording, and covers 80 dB adjustable range at a sampling rate of 25 kHz. Experimental recordings with the eSoC from cultured neurons in vitro validate its functionality in accurately resolving chemically induced multi-unit intracellular electrical activity.
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- 2024
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9. An electroencephalogram microdisplay to visualize neuronal activity on the brain surface.
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Tchoe Y, Wu T, U HS, Roth DM, Kim D, Lee J, Cleary DR, Pizarro P, Tonsfeldt KJ, Lee K, Chen PC, Bourhis AM, Galton I, Coughlin B, Yang JC, Paulk AC, Halgren E, Cash SS, and Dayeh SA
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- Animals, Swine, Rats, Neurons physiology, Brain Mapping methods, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, Electrocorticography methods, Male, Brain physiology, Electroencephalography methods
- Abstract
Functional mapping during brain surgery is applied to define brain areas that control critical functions and cannot be removed. Currently, these procedures rely on verbal interactions between the neurosurgeon and electrophysiologist, which can be time-consuming. In addition, the electrode grids that are used to measure brain activity and to identify the boundaries of pathological versus functional brain regions have low resolution and limited conformity to the brain surface. Here, we present the development of an intracranial electroencephalogram (iEEG)-microdisplay that consists of freestanding arrays of 2048 GaN light-emitting diodes laminated on the back of micro-electrocorticography electrode grids. With a series of proof-of-concept experiments in rats and pigs, we demonstrate that these iEEG-microdisplays allowed us to perform real-time iEEG recordings and display cortical activities by spatially corresponding light patterns on the surface of the brain in the surgical field. Furthermore, iEEG-microdisplays allowed us to identify and display cortical landmarks and pathological activities from rat and pig models. Using a dual-color iEEG-microdisplay, we demonstrated coregistration of the functional cortical boundaries with one color and displayed the evolution of electrical potentials associated with epileptiform activity with another color. The iEEG-microdisplay holds promise to facilitate monitoring of pathological brain activity in clinical settings.
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- 2024
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10. Modular Phoneme Processing in Human Superior Temporal Gyrus.
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Cleary DR, Tchoe Y, Bourhis A, Dickey CW, Stedelin B, Ganji M, Lee SH, Lee J, Siler DA, Brown EC, Rosen BQ, Kaestner E, Yang JC, Soper DJ, Han SJ, Paulk AC, Cash SS, Raslan AMT, Dayeh SA, and Halgren E
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Modular organization is fundamental to cortical processing, but its presence is human association cortex is unknown. We characterized phoneme processing with 128-1024 channel micro-arrays at 50-200µm pitch on superior temporal gyrus of 7 patients. High gamma responses were highly correlated within ~1.7mm diameter modules, sharply delineated from adjacent modules with distinct time-courses and phoneme-selectivity. We suggest that receptive language cortex may be organized in discrete processing modules.
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- 2024
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11. Flexible, scalable, high channel count stereo-electrode for recording in the human brain.
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Lee K, Paulk AC, Ro YG, Cleary DR, Tonsfeldt KJ, Kfir Y, Pezaris JS, Tchoe Y, Lee J, Bourhis AM, Vatsyayan R, Martin JR, Russman SM, Yang JC, Baohan A, Richardson RM, Williams ZM, Fried SI, Hoi Sang U, Raslan AM, Ben-Haim S, Halgren E, Cash SS, and Dayeh SA
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- Humans, Electrodes, Action Potentials physiology, Electrodes, Implanted, Brain physiology, Neurons physiology
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Over the past decade, stereotactically placed electrodes have become the gold standard for deep brain recording and stimulation for a wide variety of neurological and psychiatric diseases. Current electrodes, however, are limited in their spatial resolution and ability to record from small populations of neurons, let alone individual neurons. Here, we report on an innovative, customizable, monolithically integrated human-grade flexible depth electrode capable of recording from up to 128 channels and able to record at a depth of 10 cm in brain tissue. This thin, stylet-guided depth electrode is capable of recording local field potentials and single unit neuronal activity (action potentials), validated across species. This device represents an advance in manufacturing and design approaches which extends the capabilities of a mainstay technology in clinical neurology., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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12. Intraoperative application and early experience with novel high-resolution, high-channel-count thin-film electrodes for human microelectrocorticography.
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Tan H, Paulk AC, Stedelin B, Cleary DR, Nerison C, Tchoe Y, Brown EC, Bourhis A, Russman S, Lee J, Tonsfeldt KJ, Yang JC, Oh H, Ro YG, Lee K, Ganji M, Galton I, Siler D, Han SJ, Collins KL, Ben-Haim S, Halgren E, Cash SS, Dayeh S, and Raslan AM
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- Humans, Microelectrodes, Language, Peroxides, Computer Systems, Craniotomy
- Abstract
Objective: The study objective was to evaluate intraoperative experience with newly developed high-spatial-resolution microelectrode grids composed of poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene) with polystyrene sulfonate (PEDOT:PSS), and those composed of platinum nanorods (PtNRs)., Methods: A cohort of patients who underwent craniotomy for pathological tissue resection and who had high-spatial-resolution microelectrode grids placed intraoperatively were evaluated. Patient demographic and baseline clinical variables as well as relevant microelectrode grid characteristic data were collected. The primary and secondary outcome measures of interest were successful microelectrode grid utilization with usable resting-state or task-related data, and grid-related adverse intraoperative events and/or grid dysfunction., Results: Included in the analysis were 89 cases of patients who underwent a craniotomy for resection of neoplasms (n = 58) or epileptogenic tissue (n = 31). These cases accounted for 94 grids: 58 PEDOT:PSS and 36 PtNR grids. Of these 94 grids, 86 were functional and used successfully to obtain cortical recordings from 82 patients. The mean cortical grid recording duration was 15.3 ± 1.15 minutes. Most recordings in patients were obtained during experimental tasks (n = 52, 58.4%), involving language and sensorimotor testing paradigms, or were obtained passively during resting state (n = 32, 36.0%). There were no intraoperative adverse events related to grid placement. However, there were instances of PtNR grid dysfunction (n = 8) related to damage incurred by suboptimal preoperative sterilization (n = 7) and improper handling (n = 1); intraoperative recordings were not performed. Vaporized peroxide sterilization was the most optimal sterilization method for PtNR grids, providing a significantly greater number of usable channels poststerilization than did steam-based sterilization techniques (median 905.0 [IQR 650.8-935.5] vs 356.0 [IQR 18.0-597.8], p = 0.0031)., Conclusions: High-spatial-resolution microelectrode grids can be readily incorporated into appropriately selected craniotomy cases for clinical and research purposes. Grids are reliable when preoperative handling and sterilization considerations are accounted for. Future investigations should compare the diagnostic utility of these high-resolution grids to commercially available counterparts and assess whether diagnostic discrepancies relate to clinical outcomes.
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- 2023
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13. The Brain Electroencephalogram Microdisplay for Precision Neurosurgery.
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Tchoe Y, Wu T, U HS, Roth DM, Kim D, Lee J, Cleary DR, Pizarro P, Tonsfeldt KJ, Lee K, Chen PC, Bourhis AM, Galton I, Coughlin B, Yang JC, Paulk AC, Halgren E, Cash SS, and Dayeh SA
- Abstract
Brain surgeries are among the most delicate clinical procedures and must be performed with the most technologically robust and advanced tools. When such surgical procedures are performed in functionally critical regions of the brain, functional mapping is applied as a standard practice that involves direct coordinated interactions between the neurosurgeon and the clinical neurology electrophysiology team. However, information flow during these interactions is commonly verbal as well as time consuming which in turn increases the duration and cost of the surgery, possibly compromising the patient outcomes. Additionally, the grids that measure brain activity and identify the boundaries of pathological versus functional brain regions suffer from low resolution (3-10 mm contact to contact spacing) with limited conformity to the brain surface. Here, we introduce a brain intracranial electroencephalogram microdisplay (Brain-iEEG-microdisplay) which conforms to the brain to measure the brain activity and display changes in near real-time (40 Hz refresh rate) on the surface of the brain in the surgical field. We used scalable engineered gallium nitride (GaN) substrates with 6" diameter to fabricate, encapsulate, and release free-standing arrays of up to 2048 GaN light emitting diodes (μLEDs) in polyimide substrates. We then laminated the μLED arrays on the back of micro-electrocorticography (μECoG) platinum nanorod grids (PtNRGrids) and developed hardware and software to perform near real-time intracranial EEG analysis and activation of light patterns that correspond to specific cortical activities. Using the Brain-iEEG-microdisplay, we precisely ideFSntified and displayed important cortical landmarks and pharmacologically induced pathological activities. In the rat model, we identified and displayed individual cortical columns corresponding to individual whiskers and the near real-time evolution of epileptic discharges. In the pig animal model, we demonstrated near real-time mapping and display of cortical functional boundaries using somatosensory evoked potentials (SSEP) and display of responses to direct electrical stimulation (DES) from the surface or within the brain tissue. Using a dual-color Brain-iEEG-microdisplay, we demonstrated co-registration of the functional cortical boundaries with one color and displayed the evolution of electrical potentials associated with epileptiform activity with another color. The Brain-iEEG-microdisplay holds the promise of increasing the efficiency of diagnosis and possibly surgical treatment, thereby reducing the cost and improving patient outcomes which would mark a major advancement in neurosurgery. These advances can also be translated to broader applications in neuro-oncology and neurophysiology.
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- 2023
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14. Electrochemical and electrophysiological considerations for clinical high channel count neural interfaces.
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Vatsyayan R, Lee J, Bourhis AM, Tchoe Y, Cleary DR, Tonsfeldt KJ, Lee K, Montgomery-Walsh R, Paulk AC, U HS, Cash SS, and Dayeh SA
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Electrophysiological recording and stimulation are the gold standard for functional mapping during surgical and therapeutic interventions as well as capturing cellular activity in the intact human brain. A critical component probing human brain activity is the interface material at the electrode contact that electrochemically transduces brain signals to and from free charge carriers in the measurement system. Here, we summarize state-of-the-art electrode array systems in the context of translation for use in recording and stimulating human brain activity. We leverage parametric studies with multiple electrode materials to shed light on the varied levels of suitability to enable high signal-to-noise electrophysiological recordings as well as safe electrophysiological stimulation delivery. We discuss the effects of electrode scaling for recording and stimulation in pursuit of high spatial resolution, channel count electrode interfaces, delineating the electrode-tissue circuit components that dictate the electrode performance. Finally, we summarize recent efforts in the connectorization and packaging for high channel count electrode arrays and provide a brief account of efforts toward wireless neuronal monitoring systems., Competing Interests: The authors declare the following competing interests: Y.T. and S.A.D. have equity in Precision Neurotek Inc. that is co-founded by the team to commercialize PtNRGrids for intraoperative mapping. S.A.D. also has competing interests not related to this work including equity in FeelTheTouch LLC. S.A.D. was a paid consultant to MaXentric Technologies. D.R.C. and K.J.T. have equity in Surgical Simulations LLC. The MGH Translational Research Center has clinical research support agreements with Neuralink, Paradromics, and Synchron, for which S.S.C. provides consultative input. The other authors declare that they have no competing interests.
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- 2023
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15. Constructing 2D maps of human spinal cord activity and isolating the functional midline with high-density microelectrode arrays.
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Russman SM, Cleary DR, Tchoe Y, Bourhis AM, Stedelin B, Martin J, Brown EC, Zhang X, Kawamoto A, Ryu WHA, Raslan AM, Ciacci JD, and Dayeh SA
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- Humans, Microelectrodes, Neurosurgical Procedures methods, Retrospective Studies, Spinal Cord, Evoked Potentials, Motor physiology, Evoked Potentials, Somatosensory physiology
- Abstract
Intraoperative neuromonitoring (IONM) is a widely used practice in spine surgery for early detection and minimization of neurological injury. IONM is most commonly conducted by indirectly recording motor and somatosensory evoked potentials from either muscles or the scalp, which requires large-amplitude electrical stimulation and provides limited spatiotemporal information. IONM may inform of inadvertent events during neurosurgery after they occur, but it does not guide safe surgical procedures when the anatomy of the diseased spinal cord is distorted. To overcome these limitations and to increase our understanding of human spinal cord neurophysiology, we applied a microelectrode array with hundreds of channels to the exposed spinal cord during surgery and resolved spatiotemporal dynamics with high definition. We used this method to construct two-dimensional maps of responsive channels and define with submillimeter precision the electrophysiological midline of the spinal cord. The high sensitivity of our microelectrode array allowed us to record both epidural and subdural responses at stimulation currents that are well below those used clinically and to resolve postoperative evoked potentials when IONM could not. Together, these advances highlight the potential of our microelectrode arrays to capture previously unexplored spinal cord neural activity and its spatiotemporal dynamics at high resolution, offering better electrophysiological markers that can transform IONM.
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- 2022
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16. Scalable Thousand Channel Penetrating Microneedle Arrays on Flex for Multimodal and Large Area Coverage BrainMachine Interfaces.
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Lee SH, Thunemann M, Lee K, Cleary DR, Tonsfeldt KJ, Oh H, Azzazy F, Tchoe Y, Bourhis AM, Hossain L, Ro YG, Tanaka A, Kılıç K, Devor A, and Dayeh SA
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The Utah array powers cutting-edge projects for restoration of neurological function, such as BrainGate, but the underlying electrode technology has itself advanced little in the last three decades. Here, advanced dual-side lithographic microfabrication processes is exploited to demonstrate a 1024-channel penetrating silicon microneedle array (SiMNA) that is scalable in its recording capabilities and cortical coverage and is suitable for clinical translation. The SiMNA is the first penetrating microneedle array with a flexible backing that affords compliancy to brain movements. In addition, the SiMNA is optically transparent permitting simultaneous optical and electrophysiological interrogation of neuronal activity. The SiMNA is used to demonstrate reliable recordings of spontaneous and evoked field potentials and of single unit activity in chronically implanted mice for up to 196 days in response to optogenetic and to whisker air-puff stimuli. Significantly, the 1024-channel SiMNA establishes detailed spatiotemporal mapping of broadband brain activity in rats. This novel scalable and biocompatible SiMNA with its multimodal capability and sensitivity to broadband brain activity will accelerate the progress in fundamental neurophysiological investigations and establishes a new milestone for penetrating and large area coverage microelectrode arrays for brain-machine interfaces., Competing Interests: Conflict of Interest The authors declare no conflict of interest.
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- 2022
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17. Ultra-Sharp Nanowire Arrays Natively Permeate, Record, and Stimulate Intracellular Activity in Neuronal and Cardiac Networks.
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Liu R, Lee J, Tchoe Y, Pre D, Bourhis AM, D'Antonio-Chronowska A, Robin G, Lee SH, Ro YG, Vatsyayan R, Tonsfeldt KJ, Hossain LA, Phipps ML, Yoo J, Nogan J, Martinez JS, Frazer KA, Bang AG, and Dayeh SA
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We report innovative scalable, vertical, ultra-sharp nanowire arrays that are individually addressable to enable long-term, native recordings of intracellular potentials. Stable amplitudes of intracellular potentials from 3D tissue-like networks of neurons and cardiomyocytes are obtained. Individual electrical addressability is necessary for high-fidelity intracellular electrophysiological recordings. This study paves the way toward predictive, high-throughput, and low-cost electrophysiological drug screening platforms.
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- 2022
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18. Human brain mapping with multithousand-channel PtNRGrids resolves spatiotemporal dynamics.
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Tchoe Y, Bourhis AM, Cleary DR, Stedelin B, Lee J, Tonsfeldt KJ, Brown EC, Siler DA, Paulk AC, Yang JC, Oh H, Ro YG, Lee K, Russman SM, Ganji M, Galton I, Ben-Haim S, Raslan AM, and Dayeh SA
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- Animals, Brain physiology, Electric Stimulation, Humans, Rats, Wakefulness, Brain Mapping, Epilepsy
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Electrophysiological devices are critical for mapping eloquent and diseased brain regions and for therapeutic neuromodulation in clinical settings and are extensively used for research in brain-machine interfaces. However, the existing clinical and experimental devices are often limited in either spatial resolution or cortical coverage. Here, we developed scalable manufacturing processes with a dense electrical connection scheme to achieve reconfigurable thin-film, multithousand-channel neurophysiological recording grids using platinum nanorods (PtNRGrids). With PtNRGrids, we have achieved a multithousand-channel array of small (30 μm) contacts with low impedance, providing high spatial and temporal resolution over a large cortical area. We demonstrated that PtNRGrids can resolve submillimeter functional organization of the barrel cortex in anesthetized rats that captured the tissue structure. In the clinical setting, PtNRGrids resolved fine, complex temporal dynamics from the cortical surface in an awake human patient performing grasping tasks. In addition, the PtNRGrids identified the spatial spread and dynamics of epileptic discharges in a patient undergoing epilepsy surgery at 1-mm spatial resolution, including activity induced by direct electrical stimulation. Collectively, these findings demonstrated the power of the PtNRGrids to transform clinical mapping and research with brain-machine interfaces.
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- 2022
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19. Considerations and recent advances in nanoscale interfaces with neuronal and cardiac networks.
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Tchoe Y, Lee J, Liu R, Bourhis AM, Vatsyayan R, Tonsfeldt KJ, and Dayeh SA
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Nanoscale interfaces with biological tissue, principally made with nanowires (NWs), are envisioned as minimally destructive to the tissue and as scalable tools to directly transduce the electrochemical activity of a neuron at its finest resolution. This review lays the foundations for understanding the material and device considerations required to interrogate neuronal activity at the nanoscale. We first discuss the electrochemical nanoelectrode-neuron interfaces and then present new results concerning the electrochemical impedance and charge injection capacities of millimeter, micrometer, and nanometer scale wires with Pt, PEDOT:PSS, Si, Ti, ITO, IrO
x , Ag, and AgCl materials. Using established circuit models for NW-neuron interfaces, we discuss the impact of having multiple NWs interfacing with a single neuron on the amplitude and temporal characteristics of the recorded potentials. We review state of the art advances in nanoelectrode-neuron interfaces, the standard control experiments to investigate their electrophysiological behavior, and present recent high fidelity recordings of intracellular potentials obtained with ultrasharp NWs developed in our laboratory that naturally permeate neuronal cell bodies. Recordings from arrays and individually addressable electrically shorted NWs are presented, and the long-term stability of intracellular recording is discussed and put in the context of established techniques. Finally, a perspective on future research directions and applications is presented., (© 2021 Author(s).)- Published
- 2021
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20. Dimension- and position-controlled growth of GaN microstructure arrays on graphene films for flexible device applications.
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Yoo D, Lee K, Tchoe Y, Guha P, Ali A, Saroj RK, Lee S, Islam ABMH, Kim M, and Yi GC
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This paper describes the fabrication process and characteristics of dimension- and position-controlled gallium nitride (GaN) microstructure arrays grown on graphene films and their quantum structures for use in flexible light-emitting device applications. The characteristics of dimension- and position-controlled growth, which is crucial to fabricate high-performance electronic and optoelectronic devices, were investigated using scanning and transmission electron microscopes and power-dependent photoluminescence spectroscopy measurements. Among the GaN microstructures, GaN microrods exhibited excellent photoluminescence characteristics including room-temperature stimulated emission, which is especially useful for optoelectronic device applications. As one of the device applications of the position-controlled GaN microrod arrays, we fabricated light-emitting diodes (LEDs) by heteroepitaxially growing In
x Ga1-x N/GaN multiple quantum wells (MQWs) and a p-type GaN layer on the surfaces of GaN microrods and by depositing Ti/Au and Ni/Au metal layers to prepare n-type and p-type ohmic contacts, respectively. Furthermore, the GaN microrod LED arrays were transferred onto Cu foil by using the chemical lift-off method. Even after being transferred onto the flexible Cu foil substrate, the microrod LEDs exhibited strong emission of visible blue light. The proposed method to enable the dimension- and position-controlled growth of GaN microstructures on graphene films can likely be used to fabricate other high-quality flexible inorganic semiconductor devices such as micro-LED displays with an ultrahigh resolution., (© 2021. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2021
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21. Microscale Physiological Events on the Human Cortical Surface.
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Paulk AC, Yang JC, Cleary DR, Soper DJ, Halgren M, O'Donnell AR, Lee SH, Ganji M, Ro YG, Oh H, Hossain L, Lee J, Tchoe Y, Rogers N, Kiliç K, Ryu SB, Lee SW, Hermiz J, Gilja V, Ulbert I, Fabó D, Thesen T, Doyle WK, Devinsky O, Madsen JR, Schomer DL, Eskandar EN, Lee JW, Maus D, Devor A, Fried SI, Jones PS, Nahed BV, Ben-Haim S, Bick SK, Richardson RM, Raslan AM, Siler DA, Cahill DP, Williams ZM, Cosgrove GR, Dayeh SA, and Cash SS
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- Acoustic Stimulation, Adult, Animals, Electric Stimulation, Electroencephalography, Electrophysiological Phenomena, Epilepsy physiopathology, Extracellular Space physiology, Female, Humans, Macaca mulatta, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Mice, Inbred ICR, Microelectrodes, Middle Aged, Somatosensory Cortex physiology, Wavelet Analysis, Young Adult, Cerebral Cortex physiology, Neurons physiology
- Abstract
Despite ongoing advances in our understanding of local single-cellular and network-level activity of neuronal populations in the human brain, extraordinarily little is known about their "intermediate" microscale local circuit dynamics. Here, we utilized ultra-high-density microelectrode arrays and a rare opportunity to perform intracranial recordings across multiple cortical areas in human participants to discover three distinct classes of cortical activity that are not locked to ongoing natural brain rhythmic activity. The first included fast waveforms similar to extracellular single-unit activity. The other two types were discrete events with slower waveform dynamics and were found preferentially in upper cortical layers. These second and third types were also observed in rodents, nonhuman primates, and semi-chronic recordings from humans via laminar and Utah array microelectrodes. The rates of all three events were selectively modulated by auditory and electrical stimuli, pharmacological manipulation, and cold saline application and had small causal co-occurrences. These results suggest that the proper combination of high-resolution microelectrodes and analytic techniques can capture neuronal dynamics that lay between somatic action potentials and aggregate population activity. Understanding intermediate microscale dynamics in relation to single-cell and network dynamics may reveal important details about activity in the full cortical circuit., (© The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2021
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22. Selective Formation of Porous Pt Nanorods for Highly Electrochemically Efficient Neural Electrode Interfaces.
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Ganji M, Paulk AC, Yang JC, Vahidi NW, Lee SH, Liu R, Hossain L, Arneodo EM, Thunemann M, Shigyo M, Tanaka A, Ryu SB, Lee SW, Tchoe Y, Marsala M, Devor A, Cleary DR, Martin JR, Oh H, Gilja V, Gentner TQ, Fried SI, Halgren E, Cash SS, and Dayeh SA
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- Animals, Electric Stimulation, Electrodes, Macaca mulatta, Male, Mice, Songbirds, Action Potentials, Biocompatible Materials, Brain-Computer Interfaces, Nanotubes, Neurons metabolism, Platinum, Visual Cortex physiology
- Abstract
The enhanced electrochemical activity of nanostructured materials is readily exploited in energy devices, but their utility in scalable and human-compatible implantable neural interfaces can significantly advance the performance of clinical and research electrodes. We utilize low-temperature selective dealloying to develop scalable and biocompatible one-dimensional platinum nanorod (PtNR) arrays that exhibit superb electrochemical properties at various length scales, stability, and biocompatibility for high performance neurotechnologies. PtNR arrays record brain activity with cellular resolution from the cortical surfaces in birds and nonhuman primates. Significantly, strong modulation of surface recorded single unit activity by auditory stimuli is demonstrated in European Starling birds as well as the modulation of local field potentials in the visual cortex by light stimuli in a nonhuman primate and responses to electrical stimulation in mice. PtNRs record behaviorally and physiologically relevant neuronal dynamics from the surface of the brain with high spatiotemporal resolution, which paves the way for less invasive brain-machine interfaces.
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- 2019
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23. Vertical ZnO Nanotube Transistor on a Graphene Film for Flexible Inorganic Electronics.
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Oh H, Park J, Choi W, Kim H, Tchoe Y, Agrawal A, and Yi GC
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The bottom-up integration of a 1D-2D hybrid semiconductor nanostructure into a vertical field-effect transistor (VFET) for use in flexible inorganic electronics is reported. Zinc oxide (ZnO) nanotubes on graphene film is used as an example. The VFET is fabricated by growing position- and dimension-controlled single crystal ZnO nanotubes vertically on a large graphene film. The graphene film, which acts as the substrate, provides a bottom electrical contact to the nanotubes. Due to the high quality of the single crystal ZnO nanotubes and the unique 1D device structure, the fabricated VFET exhibits excellent electrical characteristics. For example, it has a small subthreshold swing of 110 mV dec
-1 , a high Imax /Imin ratio of 106 , and a transconductance of 170 nS µm-1 . The electrical characteristics of the nanotube VFETs are validated using 3D transport simulations. Furthermore, the nanotube VFETs fabricated on graphene films can be easily transferred onto flexible plastic substrates. The resulting components are reliable, exhibit high performance, and do not degrade significantly during testing., (© 2018 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.)- Published
- 2018
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24. Real-Time Characterization Using in situ RHEED Transmission Mode and TEM for Investigation of the Growth Behaviour of Nanomaterials.
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Jo J, Tchoe Y, Yi GC, and Kim M
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A novel characterization technique using both in situ reflection high-energy electron diffraction (RHEED) transmission mode and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) has been developed to investigate the growth behaviour of semiconductor nanostructures. RHEED employed in transmission mode enables the acquisition of structural information during the growth of nanostructures such as nanorods. Such real-time observation allows the investigation of growth mechanisms of various nanomaterials that is not possible with conventional ex situ analytical methods. Additionally, real-time monitoring by RHEED transmission mode offers a complete range of information when coupled with TEM, providing structural and chemical information with excellent spatial resolution, leading to a better understanding of the growth behaviour of nanomaterials. Here, as a representative study using the combined technique, the nucleation and crystallization of InAs nanorods and the epitaxial growth of In
x Ga1-x As(GaAs) shell layers on InAs nanorods are explored. The structural changes in the InAs nanorods at the early growth stage caused by the transition of the local growth conditions and the strain relaxation processes that occur during epitaxial coating of the shell layers are shown. This technique advances our understanding of the growth behaviour of various nanomaterials, which allows the realization of nanostructures with novel properties and their application in future electronics and optoelectronics.- Published
- 2018
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25. Flexible resistive random access memory devices by using NiO x /GaN microdisk arrays fabricated on graphene films.
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Lee K, Park JW, Tchoe Y, Yoon J, Chung K, Yoon H, Lee S, Yoon C, Ho Park B, and Yi GC
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We report flexible resistive random access memory (ReRAM) arrays fabricated by using NiO
x /GaN microdisk arrays on graphene films. The ReRAM device was created from discrete GaN microdisk arrays grown on graphene films produced by chemical vapor deposition, followed by deposition of NiOx thin layers and Au metal contacts. The microdisk ReRAM arrays were transferred to flexible plastic substrates by a simple lift-off technique. The electrical and memory characteristics of the ReRAM devices were investigated under bending conditions. Resistive switching characteristics, including cumulative probability, endurance, and retention, were measured. After 1000 bending repetitions, no significant change in the device characteristics was observed. The flexible ReRAM devices, constructed by using only inorganic materials, operated reliably at temperatures as high as 180 °C.- Published
- 2017
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26. Flexible GaN Light-Emitting Diodes Using GaN Microdisks Epitaxial Laterally Overgrown on Graphene Dots.
- Author
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Chung K, Yoo H, Hyun JK, Oh H, Tchoe Y, Lee K, Baek H, Kim M, and Yi GC
- Abstract
The epitaxial lateral overgrowth (ELOG) of GaN microdisks on graphene microdots and the fabrication of flexible light-emitting diodes (LEDs) using these microdisks is reported. An ELOG technique with only patterned graphene microdots is used, without any growth mask. The discrete micro-LED arrays are transferred onto Cu foil by a simple lift-off technique, which works reliably under various bending conditions., (© 2016 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Real-time device-scale imaging of conducting filament dynamics in resistive switching materials.
- Author
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Lee K, Tchoe Y, Yoon H, Baek H, Chung K, Lee S, Yoon C, Park BH, and Yi GC
- Abstract
ReRAM is a compelling candidate for next-generation non-volatile memory owing to its various advantages. However, fluctuation of operation parameters are critical weakness occurring failures in 'reading' and 'writing' operations. To enhance the stability, it is important to understand the mechanism of the devices. Although numerous studies have been conducted using AFM or TEM, the understanding of the device operation is still limited due to the destructive nature and/or limited imaging range of the previous methods. Here, we propose a new hybrid device composed of ReRAM and LED enabling us to monitor the conducting filament (CF) configuration on the device scale during resistive switching. We directly observe the change in CF configuration across the whole device area through light emission from our hybrid device. In contrast to former studies, we found that minor CFs were formed earlier than major CF contributing to the resistive switching. Moreover, we investigated the substitution of a stressed major CF with a fresh minor CF when large fluctuation of operation voltage appeared after more than 50 times of resistive switching in atmospheric condition. Our results present an advancement in the understanding of ReRAM operation mechanism, and a step toward stabilizing the fluctuations in ReRAM switching parameters.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Microtube Light-Emitting Diode Arrays with Metal Cores.
- Author
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Tchoe Y, Lee CH, Park JB, Baek H, Chung K, Jo J, Kim M, and Yi GC
- Abstract
We report the fabrication and characteristics of vertical microtube light-emitting diode (LED) arrays with a metal core inside the devices. To make the LEDs, gallium nitride (GaN)/indium gallium nitride (In(x)Ga(1-x)N)/zinc oxide (ZnO) coaxial microtube LED arrays were grown on an n-GaN/c-aluminum oxide (Al2O3) substrate. The microtube LED arrays were then lifted-off the substrate by wet chemical etching of the sacrificial ZnO microtubes and the silicon dioxide (SiO2) layer. The chemically lifted-off LED layer was then transferred upside-down on other supporting substrates. To create the metal cores, titanium/gold and indium tin oxide were deposited on the inner shells of the microtubes, forming n-type electrodes inside the metal-cored LEDs. The characteristics of the resulting devices were determined by measuring electroluminescence and current-voltage characteristic curves. To gain insights into the current-spreading characteristics of the devices and understand how to make them more efficient, we modeled them computationally.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Statistical Analysis of Electrical Properties of Octanemonothiol versus Octanedithol in PEDOT:PSS-Electrode Molecular Junctions.
- Author
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Lee H, Jeong H, Kim D, Hwang WT, Tchoe Y, Yi GC, and Lee T
- Abstract
We fabricated a large number of octanemonothiol (C8) and octanedithol (DC8) molecular electronic devices with, Pedot: PSS (3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene) interlayer and performed a statistical analysis on the electronic properties of these devices. From the analysis, we obtained the Gaussian plot of histograms of Log10 (current density (J)) and several statistical estimates such as arithmetic mean, median, Gaussian mean, arithmetic standard deviation, adjusted absolute median deviation, and Gaussian standard deviation. We determined the current density-voltage (J-V) characteristics from the statistically representative data for C8 and DC8 devices and found that the conductivity of C8 is higher than that of DC8 by a factor of ~10. The difference of the conductivity of C8 and DC8 devices is attributed to the difference of the contact properties between the C8 and DC8 PEDOT:PSS-interlayer molecular junctions.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Variable-color light-emitting diodes using GaN microdonut arrays.
- Author
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Tchoe Y, Jo J, Kim M, Heo J, Yoo G, Sone C, and Yi GC
- Abstract
Microdonut-shaped GaN/Inx Ga1-x N light-emitting diode (LED) microarrays are fabricated for variable-color emitters. The figure shows clearly donut-shaped light emission from all the individual microdonut LEDs. Furthermore, microdonut LEDs exhibit spatially-resolved blue and green EL colors, which can be tuned by either controlling the external bias voltage or changing the size of the microdonut LED., (© 2014 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.)
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. The effect of beta-irradiation on deoxyribonucleoprotein.
- Author
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Yoshii G and Tchoe YT
- Subjects
- Animals, Calcium Isotopes, Cattle, Electric Conductivity, Photometry, Spectrum Analysis, Thymus Gland, Nucleoproteins, Radiobiology
- Published
- 1966
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Effects of x- and ultra-violet irradiation on the incorporation of phosphorus-32 into isolated nuclei of rabbit appendix.
- Author
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TCHOE YT and SIBATANI A
- Subjects
- Animals, Rabbits, X-Rays, Appendix metabolism, Cell Nucleus metabolism, Phosphorus metabolism, Radioisotopes, Ultraviolet Rays, Viola
- Published
- 1959
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Chemical protection for the incorporation of phosphorus-32 into nucleic acids of lymphatic cells against gamma-irradiation.
- Author
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HONJO I, TCHOE YT, TAKAMORI Y, and AKABOSHI M
- Subjects
- Humans, Cysteamine, DNA, Lymphatic Vessels, Lymphoid Tissue, Nucleic Acids, Phosphorus, RNA, Radiation-Protective Agents, beta-Aminoethyl Isothiourea
- Published
- 1963
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Modification of radiation-damage by environmental factors, as demonstrated by incorporation of 32P into nucleic acids of gamma-irradiated Ehrlich ascites-tumour cells.
- Author
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TCHOE YT, TAKAMORI Y, AKABOSHI M, and HONJO I
- Subjects
- Animals, Ascites, Carcinoma, Carcinoma, Ehrlich Tumor, Gamma Rays, Nitrogen, Nucleic Acids, Phosphorus Isotopes, Radiation Protection
- Published
- 1962
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Highly radioactive fallout particles ingested by mice.
- Author
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Yoshida S, Oki I, and Tchoe YT
- Subjects
- Animals, Male, Mice, Feces analysis, Radioactive Fallout
- Published
- 1966
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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