09/25/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 09/25/2025 08:27
Thursday, September 25, 2025
Media Contact: Tanner Holubar | Communications Specialist | 405-744-2065 | [email protected]
College of Engineering, Architecture and Technology researchers are using transformative research to take neuroscience to the next dimension.
This reflects CEAT's commitment to Oklahoma State University's land-grant mission by utilizing innovative research to provide solutions to real-world problems faced by communities in Oklahoma and beyond.
Dr. Shuodao Wang, associate professor in the School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, was part of a preclinical research endeavor that was published Nature Electronics in August 2025. The project, titled "Monolithic three-dimensional neural probes from deterministic rolling of soft electronics," featured collaborators from OSU, Boston University, Carnegie Mellon University, Dartmouth College, Northeastern University, University of Pittsburgh, Weill Cornell Medical College and Boston Children's Hospital.
Dr. Shuodao WangThe project resulted in developing neural probe arrays that can record neural activities in the brain at various predetermined locations and depths. These structures are carefully crafted by rolling a flat integrated device into a 3D cylindrical shape, overcoming challenges associated with the fragile nature of the electronics and the large deformation during the rolling process.
Traditional 2D probes, some of which have been used since the 1970s, cannot be reshaped and are not capable of detecting neural activities at various depths across the brain. The probes developed in this project allow them to process information from hundreds of specifically targeted neurons across multiple brain layers at once.
The OSU team led efforts in the mechanical design and analysis of the probes, as well as in developing theoretical and numerical models to predict their 3D spatial positioning after they have been rolled.
"This is crucial for determining the accurate position where neural signals are collected," Wang said.
In the early stages of development, the probes were able to detect the impulses of individual neurons in rodents and non-human primates. Researchers discovered that the 3D probes provided an extraordinary amount of detail that surpassed what was detectable with 2D probes.
"The main innovation here is that the 3D probes enable flexibility in design to accurately position each probe tip to a desirable depth at a specific targeted location, i.e., a full-field, 3D spatial mapping of the brain activities becomes possible," Wang said. "It is an enabling technology and a powerful tool, which will drastically advance knowledge in the field. Its importance to neural science research is analogous to the importance of having a microscope of higher resolution and depth of view to researchers studying microbiological activities."
The preclinical nature of this research means more studies and tests are needed before the true impact of this innovation is known. Wang said activities in the prefrontal cortex - believed to control decision-making, emotional regulation and others - where neurons are connected over a large distance, require more study to be fully understood. More research will also determine how nerve cells in deeper layers of one part of the brain interact with nerve cells in the upper layers of another region of the brain.
More studies and tests are needed to explore the true impact of this innovation. Wang said the technology will provide information on how neurons distributed over a large area and various depths interact with each other, thereby enabling studies on the activities in, for example, the prefrontal cortex, which is believed to control decision-making, emotional regulation and others. With future development of devices such as optoelectrical shank-based probes, the technology also provides a pathway toward optogenetics - or optical stimulation of the brain.
These probes, housing hundreds of sensors and actuators, could shed new light on complex neural processes like vision, memory, decision-making and motor control, providing a framework for how neural networks influence behavior.
"I believe we found a very powerful tool for advancing research in neural sciences and neural stimulation technologies," Wang said.