Publications by authors named "Mehrdad Ramezani"

Optically transparent neural microelectrodes have facilitated simultaneous electrophysiological recordings from the brain surface with the optical imaging and stimulation of neural activity. A remaining challenge is to scale down the electrode dimensions to the single-cell size and increase the density to record neural activity with high spatial resolution across large areas to capture nonlinear neural dynamics. Here we developed transparent graphene microelectrodes with ultrasmall openings and a large, transparent recording area without any gold extensions in the field of view with high-density microelectrode arrays up to 256 channels.

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Human cortical organoids, three-dimensional neuronal cultures, are emerging as powerful tools to study brain development and dysfunction. However, whether organoids can functionally connect to a sensory network in vivo has yet to be demonstrated. Here, we combine transparent microelectrode arrays and two-photon imaging for longitudinal, multimodal monitoring of human cortical organoids transplanted into the retrosplenial cortex of adult mice.

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The hippocampus plays a critical role in spatial navigation and episodic memory. However, research on in vivo hippocampal activity dynamics mostly relies on single modalities, such as electrical recordings or optical imaging, with respectively limited spatial and temporal resolution. Here, we develop the E-Cannula, integrating fully transparent graphene microelectrodes with imaging cannula, which enables simultaneous electrical recording and two-photon calcium imaging from the exact same neural populations across an anatomically extended region of the mouse hippocampal CA1 stably across several days.

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. Electrical recordings of neural activity from brain surface have been widely employed in basic neuroscience research and clinical practice for investigations of neural circuit functions, brain-computer interfaces, and treatments for neurological disorders. Traditionally, these surface potentials have been believed to mainly reflect local neural activity.

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The realization of truly unclonable identification and authentication tags is the key factor in protecting the global economy from an ever-increasing number of counterfeit attacks. Here, we report on the demonstration of nanoscale tags that exploit the electromechanical spectral signature as a fingerprint that is characterized by inherent randomness in fabrication processing. Benefiting from their ultraminiaturized size and transparent constituents, these clandestine nanoelectromechanical tags provide substantial immunity to physical tampering and cloning.

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A fabrication process is developed to grow c -axis textured aluminum nitride (AlN) films on the sidewall of single-crystal silicon (Si) microfins to realize fin bulk acoustic wave resonators (FinBARs). FinBARs enable ultradense integration of high-quality-factor ( Q ) resonators and low-loss filters on a small chip footprint and provide extreme lithographical frequency scalability over ultra- and super-high-frequency regimes. Si microfins with large aspect ratio are patterned and their sidewall surfaces are atomically smoothened.

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In this part of the paper, numerical and experimental verification of the analytical design procedure is presented. Various waveguide-based test-vehicles, implemented in single crystal silicon and transduced by thin aluminum nitride films, are demonstrated. Silicon resonators with type-I and type-II dispersion characteristics are presented to experimentally verify the analytical mode synthesis technique for realization of high quality-factor silicon Lamb wave resonators.

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