Large-scale high-density brain-wide neural recording in nonhuman primates

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Eric M Trautmann, Janis K Hesse, Gabriel M Stine, Ruobing Xia, Shude Zhu, Daniel J O'Shea, Bill Karsh, Jennifer Colonell, Frank F Lanfranchi, Saurabh Vyas, Andrew Zimnik, Elom Amematsro, Natalie A Steinemann, Daniel A Wagenaar, Marius Pachitariu, Alexandru Andrei, Carolina Mora Lopez, John O'Callaghan, Jan Putzeys, Bogdan C Raducanu, Marleen Welkenhuysen, Mark Churchland, Tirin Moore, Michael Shadlen, Krishna Shenoy, Doris Tsao, Barundeb Dutta, Timothy Harris

Nat Neurosci. 2025 Jul;28(7):1562-1575. doi: 10.1038/s41593-025-01976-5. Epub 2025 Jun 23.

ABSTRACT

High-density silicon probes have transformed neuroscience by enabling large-scale neural recordings at single-cell resolution. However, existing technologies have provided limited functionality in nonhuman primates (NHPs) such as macaques. In the present report, we describe the design, fabrication and performance of Neuropixels 1.0 NHP, a high-channel electrode array designed to enable large-scale acute recording throughout large animal brains. The probe features 4,416 recording sites distributed along a 45-mm shank. Experimenters can programmably select 384 recording channels, enabling simultaneous multi-area recording from thousands of neurons with single or multiple probes. This technology substantially increases scalability and recording access relative to existing technologies and enables new classes of experiments that involve electrophysiological mapping of brain areas at single-neuron and single-spike resolution, measurement of spike-spike correlations between cells and simultaneous brain-wide recordings at scale.

PMID:40551025 | PMC:PMC12229894 | DOI:10.1038/s41593-025-01976-5