Lecture 8a: Tuesday, September 25, 2018 13:08
Lecture 8a: Tuesday, September 25, 2018 13:08
- Noisy/messy
- There can be interference in the signal
- Filter the data to get rid of the noise
- The electrical signal from each cell is tiny
- For an electrode to detect electrical activity, a lot of cells have to fire
- These cells have to fire at the same time
- Synchronization
- The more cells firing together at the same time, the stronger the EEG signal,
average potential respond
Examining frequency components
- High frequency wave to be high pitch sound, vice versa
- Different frequency components correspond to different cognitive states
- This provides insights into an individual level of consciousness
- DELTA---associated with deep sleep (0-4Hz), observe sleep patter
- THETA---rarely seen in humans, broadly related to emotion and cognition (4-8
Hz)
- High frequency wave to be high pitch sound, vice versa
- Different frequency components correspond to different cognitive states
- This provides insights into an individual level of consciousness
- DELTA---associated with deep sleep (0-4Hz), observe sleep patter
- THETA---rarely seen in humans, broadly related to emotion and cognition (4-8
Hz)
- ALPHA--resting wakefulness
- BETA---increased alertness and attention, low amplitude in the EEG
- Creativity and alpha power---top-down attention
Examining event related potentials (ERP)
- Analyse changes in the EEG output following a specific event
- Present participant with a stimulus
- Record neural activity time locked to that stimulus
- Take many recordings to get an "average response the stimulus
- Different peaks/troughs in ERP reflect different processing states
How do we interpret EEG data?
EEG has good temporal resolution--you can record exactly when changes in brain
activity occur
However, it has poor spatial resolution--you cannot tell exactly where those
electrical changes are occurring in the brain
Applications of EEG data?
- Clinical applications
- Measure different cognitive states/phenomena--attention, memory, activity
in sensory pathways