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Rehabilitation of a discrete sensory motor learning function by a prosthetic chip (RENACHIP)

Funded under 7th FWP (Seventh Framework Programme)

Research area: ICT-2007.8.3 Bio-ICT convergence

Coordinator
Contact Person: Name: ROBERTSON, DOUGLAS
Tel: +44-1912-225140
Fax: +44-1912-223401
Email: Contact
Organisation: THE UNIVERSITY OF NEWCASTLE UPON TYNE
6 KENSINGTON TERRACE
NE1 7RU   NEWCASTLE UPON TYNE
UNITED KINGDOM

Project description

The objective of this project is to develop a full biohybrid rehabilitation and substitution methodology; replacing the aged cerebellar brain circuit with a biomimetic chip bidirectionally interfaced to the inputs and outputs of the system. Information processing will interface with the cerebellum to actuate a normal, real-time functional behavioural recovery, providing a proof-of-concept test for the functional rehabilitation of more complex neuronal systems.

The model neuronal system we have chosen is the cerebellar microcircuit involved in conditioning of the motor eyeblink response. Localized experimental or clinical damage to this microcircuit disrupts irreversibly the eyeblink conditioning while aging invariably compromises the acquisition and retention of the eyeblink response.

Using the aged rat as an experimental model we plan to integrate a biomimetic chip to rehabilitate a discrete sensory-motor learning function lost in the senescent cerebellar microcircuit, through the development of multiple enabling technologies.

We will develop novel electrodes to both detect the stimulus and trigger the eyeblink response. The stimulus signals will be extracted from background neuronal activity and undergo conditioning, processing and interpretation in a silicon chip which mimics the function of the deficient cerebellar circuit. The output from this biomimetic chip will then trigger the eyeblink response by way of implanted stimulation electrodes.

Complete success would be achieved through real-time demonstration of functional recovery of the lost motor learning response in aged rats. Advances in any or all of the component technologies, their integration and clinical implementation, and improved understanding of the neuronal circuit would represent incomplete but valuable progress in the treatment of deficient neuronal systems.


Project details
Project Acronym: RENACHIP
Project Reference: 216809
Start Date: 2008-02-01
Duration: 36 months
Project Cost: 3.3 million euro
Contract Type: Collaborative project (generic)
End Date: 2011-01-31
Project Status: Execution
Project Funding: 2.6 million euro

Participants
WIZSOFT (ISRAEL) LTD ISRAEL
GUGER TECHNOLOGIES OEG AUSTRIA
UNIVERSITAT POMPEU FABRA SPAIN
LUNDS UNIVERSITET SWEDEN
TEL AVIV UNIVERSITY ISRAEL
Record Control Number: 85358
Update Date: 2008-02-01 15:29:25.0

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