| Literature DB >> 11997722 |
Nicole Ille1, Patrick Berg, Michael Scherg.
Abstract
Review and analysis of continuous EEG recordings may be impeded by physiological artifacts such as blinks, eye movements, or cardiac activity. Spatial filters based on artifact and brain signal topographies can remove artifacts completely without distortion of relevant brain activity. The authors describe the basic principle of artifact correction by spatial filtering and they review different approaches to estimate artifact and brain signal topographies. The main focus is on the preselection approach, which is fast enough to be applied while paging through the segments of a digital EEG recording. Examples of real EEG segments, containing epileptic seizure activity or interictal spikes contaminated by artifacts, show that spatial filtering by preselection can be a useful tool during EEG review. Advantages and disadvantages of the different spatial filter approaches are discussed.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2002 PMID: 11997722 DOI: 10.1097/00004691-200203000-00002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Neurophysiol ISSN: 0736-0258 Impact factor: 2.177