Abstract
Abstract
Objective. Twisted wire probes (TWPs, e.g. stereotrodes and tetrodes) provide a cheap and reliable method for obtaining high quality, multiple single-unit neural recordings in freely moving animals. Despite their ubiquity, TWPs are constructed using a tedious procedure
consisting of manually folding, turning, and fusing microwire. This imposes a significant labor burden on research personnel who use TWPs in their experiments. Approach. To address this issue, we created Twister3, an open-source microwire twisting machine.
This machine features a quick-draw wire feeder that eliminates manual wire folding, an auto-aligning motor attachment mechanism which results in consistently straight probes, and a high speed motor for rapid probe turning.
Main results. Twister3 greatly increases the speed and repeatability of constructing twisted microwire
probes compared to existing options. Users with less than one hour of experience using the device were able to make ~70 tetrodes per hour, on average. It is cheap, well documented, and all associated designs and source code are open-source. Significance. Twister3 significantly reduces the labor burden of creating high-quality TWPs so electrophysiologists can spend more of their time performing recordings rather than making probes. Therefore, this device is of interest to any lab performing TWP neural recordings, for example, using microdrives.
Funder
National Institute of Mental Health
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke
NEC Corporation Fund for Research in Computers and Communications
Center for Brains, Minds and Machines
Klingenstein-Simons Foundation
Simons Center for the Social Brain
McKnight Foundation
Vallee Foundation
Subject
Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Biomedical Engineering
Cited by
3 articles.
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