Literature DB >> 11125589

Development and evaluation of the piecewise Prony method for evoked potential analysis.

V Garoosi1, B H Jansen.   

Abstract

A new method is presented to decompose nonstationary signals into a summation of oscillatory components with time varying frequency, amplitude, and phase characteristics. This method, referred to as piecewise Prony method (PPM), is an improvement over the classical Prony method, which can only deal with signals containing components with fixed frequency, amplitude and phase, and monotonically increasing or decreasing rate of change. PPM allows the study of the temporal profile of post-stimulus signal changes in single-trial evoked potentials (EPs), which can lead to new insights in EP generation. We have evaluated this method on simulated data to test its limitations and capabilities, and also on single-trial EPs. The simulation experiments showed that the PPM can detect amplitude changes as small as 10%, rate changes as small as 10%, and 0.15 Hz of frequency changes. The capabilities of the PPM were demonstrated using single electroencephalogram/EP trials of flash visual EPs recorded from one normal subject. The trial-by-trial results confirmed that the stimulation drastically attenuates the alpha activity shortly after stimulus presentation, with the alpha activity returning about 0.5 s later. The PPM results also provided evidence that delta activity undergoes phase alignment following stimulus presentation.

Mesh:

Year:  2000        PMID: 11125589     DOI: 10.1109/10.887935

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  IEEE Trans Biomed Eng        ISSN: 0018-9294            Impact factor:   4.538


  4 in total

1.  Auditory evoked potential variability in healthy and schizophrenia subjects.

Authors:  Ben H Jansen; Lingli Hu; Nash N Boutros
Journal:  Clin Neurophysiol       Date:  2010-04-02       Impact factor: 3.708

2.  Coding Prony's method in MATLAB and applying it to biomedical signal filtering.

Authors:  A Fernández Rodríguez; L de Santiago Rodrigo; E López Guillén; J M Rodríguez Ascariz; J M Miguel Jiménez; Luciano Boquete
Journal:  BMC Bioinformatics       Date:  2018-11-26       Impact factor: 3.169

3.  Evoked potential variability.

Authors:  Lingli Hu; Nash N Boutros; Ben H Jansen
Journal:  J Neurosci Methods       Date:  2008-12-03       Impact factor: 2.390

4.  Pure phase-locking of beta/gamma oscillation contributes to the N30 frontal component of somatosensory evoked potentials.

Authors:  Guy Cheron; Ana Maria Cebolla; Caty De Saedeleer; Ana Bengoetxea; Françoise Leurs; Axelle Leroy; Bernard Dan
Journal:  BMC Neurosci       Date:  2007-09-18       Impact factor: 3.288

  4 in total

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