What you see in the EEG ─ event-related signals. ▻ Event-related potentials. ▻
Scalp topographies. ▻ Time-frequency analysis of event-related rhythms.
Introduction to the EEG technique Part 1: neural origins of the EEG Niko Busch Charité University Medicine Berlin
The History of the EEG 18th cent. Physiologists discover elctrical properties of living tissue (Galvani, Ohm, Faraday)
1870ies Caton records brain potentials from cortex 1929 Berger records electrical activity from the scalp 1930ies Studies of abnormal activity with epilepsy and tumors; first single-trial ERPs 1940ies commercial EEG system with multielectrode montages (up to 16 channels!)
1950ies differential amplifiers 1957 The toposcope (imaging of electrical brain activity) 1962 Computerized ERP analyses
1964/65 Discovery of CNV and P3 1980 digital EEG systems, source analysis, etc.
What you see in the EEG ─ spontaneous rhythms Frequency Ranges:
Beta:
14 – 30 Hz
Alpha: 8 – 13 Hz
Theta: 5 – 7 Hz
Delta: 1 – 4 Hz
What you see in the EEG ─ epileptic activity
Seizure-related and inter-ictal activity
Can be used to localize epileptic focus
What you see in the EEG ─ event-related signals
Event-related potentials
Scalp topographies
Time-frequency analysis of event-related rhythms
Source analysis
What is electroencephalography (EEG)?
“It is generally accepted that the EEG reflects activity originating in the brain” (Coles & Rugg, 1995, Electrophysiology of Mind)
EEG reflects voltages generated (mostly) by excitatory postsynaptic potentials from apical dendrites of massively synchronised neocortical pyramidal cells.
A few electrical concepts
Voltage the potential of current to flow from one point to another. think of it as “water pressure”. this is a relative measure!
Current number of charged particles (electrons, ions) that flow in a given time. think of it as “water flow”.
Resistance resistance to movement of charges like having a skinny or blocked hose segment
Ohm’s Law: Voltage = Current * Resistance
The neuron
Signal transmission:
chemical between neurons at the synapse
electrical within neuron
The neuron’s resting potential
Ion concentrations:
Potential differences:
extracellular: Sodium (Na+) and Chloride (Cl-) intracellular: Potassium (K+) and organic anions (-)