1 / 13

What are we measuring in EEG and MEG?

What are we measuring in EEG and MEG?. Methods for Dummies 2007 Matthew Longo. Basic Logic. Electrical activity of neurons produces currents spreading through the head.

desma
Download Presentation

What are we measuring in EEG and MEG?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. What are we measuring in EEG and MEG? Methods for Dummies 2007 Matthew Longo

  2. Basic Logic • Electrical activity of neurons produces currents spreading through the head. • These currents reach the surface of the scalp, in the form of voltage changes and magnetic fields, both of which can be measured non-invasively. • Measured voltage changes at the scalp are called the electroencephologram (EEG). • Measured magnetic fields at the scalp are called the magnetoencephologram (MEG).

  3. Electrical Activity in the Cortex • Excitatory postsynaptic potential (EPSP) • Postsynaptic • Dendritic • Measurable by EEG/MEG • Action Potential • Presynaptic • Axonal • Generally notmeasurable by EEG/MEG

  4. Apical dendrites are oriented in parallel along the cortical sheet • Apical dendrites thought to contribute strongest signals measurable with EEG/MEG • Axons are more randomly located, resulting in currents from presynaptic action potentials cancelling each other out • Postsynaptic electrical activity (EPSP) sums, creating large “dipole”

  5. EEG and MEG Signals • EPSPs of parallel dendrites in cortical columns creates: • Primary current (what we want to know about) • Secondary/volume currents • Measured by EEG • Influenced by intervening tissue • Magnetic field perpendicular to primary current • Measured by MEG • Unaffected by intervening tissue

  6. Effects of Dipole Alignment

  7. Spatial Resolution • Single synapse on dendrite contributes ~20 fA-m (femto = 10-15 = one quadrillionth) • Empirical observations suggest EEG/MEG signals are typically ~ 10 nA-m (nano = 10-9 = one millionth) • Therefore, typical EEG/MEG signals reflect summed activity of ~ 500,000 – 1,000,000 neurons • ~ 1-5 mm2 of cortex forms lower bound of spatial resolution • In practice, the inverse problem further limits the ability to spatially pinpoint EEG/MEG signals.

  8. MEG Signals • MEG measures the fluctuations of frequency (Hz) and amplitude (T) of the brain magnetic signal • 10 fT (10-15) to about several pT (10-12) • Earth’s magnetic field ~ .5 mT • Requires: • Preposterously sensitive magnetometer (SQUID) • Shielding from external noise

  9. The SQUID • Superconducting Quantum Interference Device (SQUID)

  10. Pros and Cons of EEG & MEG

  11. Further Reading • Baillet et al. (2001). Electromagnetic brain mapping. IEEE Signal Processing Magazine. • Del Gratta et al. (2001). Reports on the Progress of Physics, 64, 1759-1814. • Hämäläinen et al. (1993). Review of Modern Physics, 65, 413-497. • Murakami & Okada. (2006). Journal of Physiology, 575.3, 925-936. • Nunez & Silberstein. (2000). Brain Topography, 13, 79-96.

More Related