Forward-looking engineering concepts for ultrasonic modulation of neural circuit activity in humans

We examine the potential for low-intensity focused ultrasound to non-invasively produce small (< 1mm3) focal acoustic fields for precise brain stimulation near the skull. Our goal is to utilize transcranial ultrasonic neuromodulation to transform communications and immersive gaming experiences and to optimize neuromodulation applications in medicine. To begin evaluating possible hardware design strategies for engineering ultrasonic brain interfaces, in the present study we evaluated the skull transmission properties of longitudinal and shear waves as a function of incidence angle for 0–2 MHz. We also employed K-wave and time-reversal numerical simulations to further inspect waveform interactions with modeled layers. Timereversal focusing for single-layer and three-layer skull cases were simulated for three different bandwidth ranges (MHz): Broadband(0–2), 1 MHz(0.4–1.4), and 0.2 MHz(0.4–0.6). Broadband and 1 MHz bandwidths emulate the performance of micromachined or piezo membrane ultrasonic arrays, while 0.2 MHz bandwidth is representative of the performance of conventional piezoelectric ultrasonic transducer. We found the 3dB focal volume was ~0.6 mm for broadband and 1 MHz, with the latter showing a slightly larger sidelobe. In contrast, 0.2 MHz nearly doubled the size of the 3dB focal volume while producing prominent sidelobes. Our results provide initial confirmation that a broadband, ultrasonic, linear array can access the first 15 mm of the human brain, which contains circuitry essential to sensory processing including pre-motor and motor planning, somatosensory feedback, and visual attention. These areas are critical targets for providing haptic feedback via non-invasive neural stimulation.

[1]  Shy Shoham,et al.  Ultrasonic neuromodulation , 2016, Journal of neural engineering.

[2]  Gregory T. Clement,et al.  Longitudinal and shear mode ultrasound propagation in human skull bone. , 2006, Ultrasound in medicine & biology.

[3]  W. Tyler,et al.  Pulsed Ultrasound Differentially Stimulates Somatosensory Circuits in Humans as Indicated by EEG and fMRI , 2012, PloS one.

[4]  Priya Bansal,et al.  Neuromodulation with single‐element transcranial focused ultrasound in human thalamus , 2018, Human brain mapping.

[5]  S. Baccus,et al.  Ultrasound Elicits Behavioral Responses through Mechanical Effects on Neurons and Ion Channels in a Simple Nervous System , 2017, The Journal of Neuroscience.

[6]  William J Tyler,et al.  Ultrasonic modulation of neural circuit activity , 2018, Current Opinion in Neurobiology.

[7]  W. Thomson,et al.  Transmission of Elastic Waves through a Stratified Solid Medium , 1950 .

[8]  Mathias Fink,et al.  From Loschmidt daemons to time-reversed waves , 2016, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences.

[9]  S. Yoo,et al.  Image-Guided Transcranial Focused Ultrasound Stimulates Human Primary Somatosensory Cortex , 2015, Scientific Reports.

[10]  R. Friedlander,et al.  Transcranial focused ultrasound modulates the activity of primary somatosensory cortex in humans. , 2014, Neurosurgery.

[11]  Alistair P. Rendell,et al.  Modeling nonlinear ultrasound propagation in heterogeneous media with power law absorption using a k-space pseudospectral method. , 2012, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America.

[12]  Sriram Subramanian,et al.  UltraHaptics: multi-point mid-air haptic feedback for touch surfaces , 2013, UIST.

[13]  G Wilson Miller,et al.  Noninvasive neuromodulation and thalamic mapping with low-intensity focused ultrasound. , 2017, Journal of neurosurgery.

[14]  Jong-Hwan Lee,et al.  Transcranial focused ultrasound stimulation of human primary visual cortex , 2016, Scientific Reports.

[15]  S. Shoham,et al.  Cell-Type-Selective Effects of Intramembrane Cavitation as a Unifying Theoretical Framework for Ultrasonic Neuromodulation123 , 2016, eNeuro.

[16]  Shy Shoham,et al.  Thermal Transients Excite Neurons through Universal Intramembrane Mechanoelectrical Effects , 2018 .

[17]  Shy Shoham,et al.  Correspondence: Revisiting the theoretical cell membrane thermal capacitance response , 2017, Nature Communications.

[18]  G. R. Curry,et al.  The acoustic characteristics of the skull. , 1978, Ultrasound in medicine & biology.