L5 - Alternative Methods Flashcards

1
Q

How many APs can occur in one second?

A
  • AP takes 3 ms
  • Max APs = 1000/3 = 333
  • Neurons are limited to 333 spikes per second
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2
Q

Explain the 10-20 System of Electrode Placement.

A
  • Reference electrodes placed on the ear / mastoid behind the ears
  • Measure from nation to inion: first and last 10% are where first and last electrodes go – remaining 3 separated by 20%
  • Same process from ear to ear and around the head
  • Z represents sagittal midline: broken down into frontal, central, and parietal
  • RH even numbers, LH odd numbers
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3
Q

What are the two common EEG montages?

A
  • Montage = position that electrodes are glued onto the scalp
  • Bipolar montage: Two electrodes per amplifier channel (each electrode has its own reference)
  • Referential montage: One common reference electrode for all electrodes
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4
Q

How does the differential operational amplifier work?

A
  • Two signals go into one amplifier – one positive and one negative
  • If same voltage enters both, one cancels out the other. This cancels any shared voltage between the two electrodes (common mode)
  • Common mode is the “noise” while the differences are averaged over many trials
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5
Q

What is an Event Related Potential?

A
  • Brief change in slow-wave EEG signal in response to a sensory stimulus
  • EEG response in a given channel is digitized by sampling the voltage across the electrode / reference pair at a sampling frequency of at least 2f (f is highest frequency of interest for the signal)
  • If you take many recordings at each point in time and add them together, creates signal averaging
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6
Q

Explain how signal averaging is used in EEG

A
  • Each stimulus presentation produces a small signal response embedded in noise
  • At any instant in time, the voltage measured across the electrode of interest and its reference electrode consists of a small signal and a large amount of noise
  • Signal is neural response while noise is random neural activity
  • If you add the same tiny signal each time, the signal will gradually get bigger. Because the noise will be equally often above and below zero, it should cancel itself out
  • The signal to noise ratio grows as the number of sweeps increases
  • The signal waveform is always the same across sweeps, so at each time point, the signal component of the voltage slowly increases relative to the noise component
  • Noise component is random: At each point in time, over a large number of sweeps, noise will cancel itself out
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7
Q

Explain the sentence, “The signal voltage across the electrode pair at each instant in time is filtered, amplified, digitized, and stored in computer memory.”

A
  • Filtering: Selectively passing certain frequencies (low-pass, high-pass, bandpass)
  • Amplifying: Increasing the original signal voltage by a factor to render it useful for recording, displaying, or computing
  • Digitizing: Converting the voltage measured on a continuous scale to discrete symbols such as numerical digits
  • 8 bit scale: 1 part in 256
  • 10 bit scale: 1 part in 1024
  • 12 bit scale: 1 part in 4096
  • A larger analog scale allows for larger fluctuations that can still be digitized
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8
Q

What is the Nyquist Criterion?

A
  • The frequency of digital sampling must be greater than twice the highest frequency of interest
  • E.g. If you want to analyze EEG components at 20 Hz, you must sample above 40 Hz
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9
Q

List 4 functions of ERP recordings.

A
  1. Normal functions of brain pathways
  2. Cognitive processing during learning about the stimulus
  3. Hemispheric differences
  4. Planning and execution of movement
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10
Q

Compare single-cell recordings, EEG/ERP, CT scan, MRI / fMRI, and PET in terms of spatial and temporal resolution.

A
  • Single cell recordings: Highest resolution, but lowest generalizability; invasive.
  • EEG / ERP: High temporal resolution but low spatial resolution
  • CT scan: Quick snapshot, but no functional information
    MRI / fMRI: High spatial resolution, low temporal resolution
  • PET: Shows metabolism, but low spatial and temporal resolution
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