The use of standardized infinity reference in EEG coherency studies.

L Marzetti, G Nolte, M G Perrucci, G L Romani, C Del Gratta

Department of Clinical Sciences and Bioimaging, Gabriele D'Annunzio University, Italy.

Journal Article: NeuroImage (impact factor: 5.74). 06/2007; 36(1):48-63. DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2007.02.034

Abstract

The study of large scale interactions in the brain from EEG signals is a promising method for the identification of functional networks. However, the validity of a large scale parameter is limited by two factors: the use of a non-neutral reference and the artifactual self-interactions between the measured EEG signals introduced by volume conduction. In this paper, we propose an approach to study large scale EEG coherency in which these factors are eliminated. Artifactual self-interaction by volume conduction is eliminated by using the imaginary part of the complex coherency as a measure of interaction and the Reference Electrode Standardization Technique (REST) is used for the approximate standardization of the reference of scalp EEG recordings to a point at infinity that, being far from all possible neural sources, acts like a neutral virtual reference. The application of our approach to simulated and real EEG data shows that the detection of interaction, as opposed to artifacts due to reference and volume conduction, is a goal that can be achieved from the study of a large scale parameter.

Source: PubMed

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Keywords

approximate standardization
 
artifacts
 
complex coherency
 
EEG signals
 
functional networks
 
imaginary part
 
large scale interactions
 
large scale parameter
 
measured EEG signals
 
neutral virtual reference
 
non-neutral reference
 
possible neural sources
 
promising method
 
real EEG data
 
Reference Electrode Standardization Technique
 
scalp EEG recordings
 
simulated
 
study large scale EEG coherency
 
volume conduction