Subdural to subgaleal EEG signal transmission: The role of distance, leakage and insulating affectors

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Subdural to subgaleal EEG signal transmission : The role of distance, leakage and insulating affectors. / Duun-Henriksen, Jonas; Sorensen, H.B.D.; Kjaer, T.W.; Madsen, R.E.; Remvig, L.S.; Jespersen, B.; Duun-Henriksen, A.K.; Thomsen, C.E.

In: Clinical Neurophysiology, 01.01.2013.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Duun-Henriksen, J, Sorensen, HBD, Kjaer, TW, Madsen, RE, Remvig, LS, Jespersen, B, Duun-Henriksen, AK & Thomsen, CE 2013, 'Subdural to subgaleal EEG signal transmission: The role of distance, leakage and insulating affectors', Clinical Neurophysiology. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.clinph.2013.02.112

APA

Duun-Henriksen, J., Sorensen, H. B. D., Kjaer, T. W., Madsen, R. E., Remvig, L. S., Jespersen, B., Duun-Henriksen, A. K., & Thomsen, C. E. (2013). Subdural to subgaleal EEG signal transmission: The role of distance, leakage and insulating affectors. Clinical Neurophysiology. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.clinph.2013.02.112

Vancouver

Duun-Henriksen J, Sorensen HBD, Kjaer TW, Madsen RE, Remvig LS, Jespersen B et al. Subdural to subgaleal EEG signal transmission: The role of distance, leakage and insulating affectors. Clinical Neurophysiology. 2013 Jan 1. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.clinph.2013.02.112

Author

Duun-Henriksen, Jonas ; Sorensen, H.B.D. ; Kjaer, T.W. ; Madsen, R.E. ; Remvig, L.S. ; Jespersen, B. ; Duun-Henriksen, A.K. ; Thomsen, C.E. / Subdural to subgaleal EEG signal transmission : The role of distance, leakage and insulating affectors. In: Clinical Neurophysiology. 2013.

Bibtex

@article{c92859dec5a14f9a9149d5fab5885a78,
title = "Subdural to subgaleal EEG signal transmission: The role of distance, leakage and insulating affectors",
abstract = "Objective: To estimate the area of cortex affecting the extracranial EEG signal. Methods: The coherence between intra- and extracranial EEG channels were evaluated on at least 10 min of spontaneous, awake data from seven patients admitted for epilepsy surgery work up. Results: Cortical electrodes showed significant extracranial coherent signals in an area of approximately 150 cm although the field of vision was probably only 31 cm based on spatial averaging of intracranial channels taking into account the influence of the craniotomy and the silastic membrane of intracranial grids. Selecting the best cortical channels, it was possible to increase the coherence values compared to the single intracranial channel with highest coherence. The coherence seemed to increase linearly with an accumulation area up to 31 cm, where 50% of the maximal coherence was obtained accumulating from only 2 cm (corresponding to one channel), and 75% when accumulating from 16 cm. Conclusion: The skull is an all frequency spatial averager but dominantly high frequency signal attenuator. Significance: An empirical assessment of the actual area of cerebral sources generating the extracranial EEG provides better opportunities for clinical electroencephalographers to determine the location of origin of particular patterns in the EEG.",
author = "Jonas Duun-Henriksen and H.B.D. Sorensen and T.W. Kjaer and R.E. Madsen and L.S. Remvig and B. Jespersen and A.K. Duun-Henriksen and C.E. Thomsen",
year = "2013",
month = jan,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1016/j.clinph.2013.02.112",
language = "English",
journal = "Clinical Neurophysiology",
issn = "1388-2457",
publisher = "Elsevier Ireland Ltd",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Subdural to subgaleal EEG signal transmission

T2 - The role of distance, leakage and insulating affectors

AU - Duun-Henriksen, Jonas

AU - Sorensen, H.B.D.

AU - Kjaer, T.W.

AU - Madsen, R.E.

AU - Remvig, L.S.

AU - Jespersen, B.

AU - Duun-Henriksen, A.K.

AU - Thomsen, C.E.

PY - 2013/1/1

Y1 - 2013/1/1

N2 - Objective: To estimate the area of cortex affecting the extracranial EEG signal. Methods: The coherence between intra- and extracranial EEG channels were evaluated on at least 10 min of spontaneous, awake data from seven patients admitted for epilepsy surgery work up. Results: Cortical electrodes showed significant extracranial coherent signals in an area of approximately 150 cm although the field of vision was probably only 31 cm based on spatial averaging of intracranial channels taking into account the influence of the craniotomy and the silastic membrane of intracranial grids. Selecting the best cortical channels, it was possible to increase the coherence values compared to the single intracranial channel with highest coherence. The coherence seemed to increase linearly with an accumulation area up to 31 cm, where 50% of the maximal coherence was obtained accumulating from only 2 cm (corresponding to one channel), and 75% when accumulating from 16 cm. Conclusion: The skull is an all frequency spatial averager but dominantly high frequency signal attenuator. Significance: An empirical assessment of the actual area of cerebral sources generating the extracranial EEG provides better opportunities for clinical electroencephalographers to determine the location of origin of particular patterns in the EEG.

AB - Objective: To estimate the area of cortex affecting the extracranial EEG signal. Methods: The coherence between intra- and extracranial EEG channels were evaluated on at least 10 min of spontaneous, awake data from seven patients admitted for epilepsy surgery work up. Results: Cortical electrodes showed significant extracranial coherent signals in an area of approximately 150 cm although the field of vision was probably only 31 cm based on spatial averaging of intracranial channels taking into account the influence of the craniotomy and the silastic membrane of intracranial grids. Selecting the best cortical channels, it was possible to increase the coherence values compared to the single intracranial channel with highest coherence. The coherence seemed to increase linearly with an accumulation area up to 31 cm, where 50% of the maximal coherence was obtained accumulating from only 2 cm (corresponding to one channel), and 75% when accumulating from 16 cm. Conclusion: The skull is an all frequency spatial averager but dominantly high frequency signal attenuator. Significance: An empirical assessment of the actual area of cerebral sources generating the extracranial EEG provides better opportunities for clinical electroencephalographers to determine the location of origin of particular patterns in the EEG.

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84875862208&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1016/j.clinph.2013.02.112

DO - 10.1016/j.clinph.2013.02.112

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 23578564

JO - Clinical Neurophysiology

JF - Clinical Neurophysiology

SN - 1388-2457

ER -

ID: 45777956