| Not a breakthrough. This technique has been known about for at least two decades. Most fNIRS uses the amplitude-based, continuous-wave modality to compare chromophore concentrations resulting from thermovascular coupling. This uses time-domain based. What this means more formally is that it uses the impulse response created from a fast optical imaging source to then detect scattering changes in the cortex that ideally correspond to neuronal activation (or lack thereof). I was actually working on a very similar device a few months ago. I had to give up as the chip shortage made the specialty ICs required to pull this off damn near impossible to buy. There are a couple of things that make TD-NIRS a bit trickier. First off, it relies upon counting photons. This makes it susceptible to all sorts of noise, coupled with the fact that you need a photodetector with a very fast rise time and at least 10-20% detection of incident photons upon the detector. Benefits
- Extremely fast (millisecond-range) neuronal activity detection
- Less susceptible to motion artifacts
- Very localized detection, scattering is well-modeled Drawbacks
- Requires extremely fast sampling rate
- Above sampling rate makes multiplexing difficult
- Still susceptible to all kinds of noise |
I've been looking at this field and my conclusion was that non-invasive optical imaging of direct neuronal activity, while possible in theory, it requires several magnitudes of improvement in today's technology. Even Openwater is detecting blood flow (and not individual neurons). Wrote my thoughts here: https://notes.invertedpassion.com/Consciousness/Fast+optical...
Curious to hear what you were building and whether you actually got close to doing fast optical imaging. Happy to chat offline, my email is here: https://invertedpassion.com/about/