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최영빈

Tchoe, Youngbin
Neural Interfaces and Semiconductor Optoelectronics Lab
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Electrocorticography microdisplay for high precision intraoperative brain mapping

Author(s)
Tchoe, YoungbinWu, TianhaiU, Hoi SangRoth, David MKim, DongwooLee, JihwanCleary, Daniel R.Pizarro, PatriciaTonsfeldt, Karen J.Lee, KeundongChen, Po ChunBourhis, Andrew M.Galton, IanCoughlin, BrianYang, Jimmy C.Paulk, Angelique C.Halgren, EricCash, Sydney S.Dayeh, Shadi A.
Issued Date
2025-08-22
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/89855
Citation
International Meeting on Information Display (IMID)
Abstract
Functional mapping during brain surgery is crucial for identifying and preserving brain regions responsible for
vital functions while removing pathological tissues. Traditionally, these procedures rely on verbal interactions
between the neurosurgeon and electrophysiologist, leading to inefficiencies in making surgical decision. Moreover,
the electrode grids used for measuring brain activity and delineating pathological from functional brain regions
suffer from low resolution and poor conformality to the brain surface.
This presentation introduces an intracranial electroencephalogram (iEEG)–microdisplay, featuring freestanding
arrays of 2048 GaN micro light-emitting diodes (micro-LEDs) laminated on the back of 1024-channel microelectrocorticography
(ECoG) grid. Through a series of experiments conducted in rat and pig models, we
demonstrate that these iEEG-microdisplays enable real-time, high-resolution recording and display of cortical
activities by showing spatially corresponding light patterns directly on the brain's surface.
Additionally, the iEEG-microdisplay effectively identified and visualized cortical landmarks and pathological
activities. Using a dual-color iEEG-microdisplay, we successfully co-registered functional cortical boundaries
with one color while visualizing the propagation of epileptiform activities with another color. These findings
suggest that iEEG-microdisplay has significant potential to enhance the monitoring of pathological brain activity
in clinical settings.
Publisher
The Korean Infomation Display Society (KMID)

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