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Electroencephalography (EEG)

Scalp electroencephalography (EEG) can be used to record ongoing oscillatory brain activity, stimulus-evoked brain potentials (event-related brain potentials, ERP). The recorded signals correspond to variations in scalp potentials, hypothesized to predominantly result from sudden and synchronized changes in postsynaptic activity, occurring in the apical dendrites of pyramidal neurons. Another approach is EEG "frequency tagging", in which a sensory stimulus is periodically repeated at a constant frequency, thereby eliciting a periodic change in the EEG signal which can be identified in the frequency domain.


Event-related potentials (ERPs)

To extract evoked potentials from the ongoing, non event-related, electrical brain activity, the event is usually repeated such as to allow the averaging of successive peristimulus EEG recordings. The principle underlying time-domain averaging techniques is that averaging successive EEG epochs should cancel out the contribution of signals which are not ‘time-locked’ or ‘stationary’ to the onset of the event while it should preserve evoked activity which is assumed to occur with a constant time-delay. The fraction of the signal which is cancelled-out by the averaging procedure is often referred to as ‘additive noise’.

Event-related potentials typically consist of a series of voltage polarity changes, observed as peaks and troughs in the average waveform. These potentials can be classified according to their relative timing to stimulus onset, their polarity, and their magnitude. In most cases, each individualized ERP deflection corresponds to neural activity arising from several temporally overlapping sources. As ERPs provide a high temporal resolution, they can be used to characterize the chronometry of the different neural processes involved in perception. Indeed, depending on their modality, sensory stimuli elicit a series of sensory or exogenous ERP peaks which reflect the initial processing occurring in modality-specific cortical areas. Following these peaks, later components may be recorded, which are thought to reflect more integrative and endogenous aspects of perception.


More about EEG signal processing :

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Researchers involved

Publications

2014

Olfactory event-related potentials in infants

The Journal of Pediatrics

Schriever VA, Gois-Eanes M, Schuster B, Huart C, Hummel T.

165(2): 372-375

2014

Body movement selectively shapes the neural representation of musical rhythms

Psychological Science

Chemin B, Mouraux A, Nozaradan S.

25(12):2147-59

2014

EEG frequency-tagging to dissociate the cortical responses to nociceptive and non-nociceptive stimuli

Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience

Colon E, Legrain V, Mouraux A.

26(10):2262-74

2014

Shifting attention between the space of the body and external space. Electrophysiological correlates of visual-nociceptive crossmodal spatial attention

Psychophysiology

Favril L, Mouraux A, Sambo CS, Legrain V.

51(5):464-77

2014

High frequency electrical stimulation of human skin induces heterotopical mechanical and heat hyperalgesia and enhanced responses to vibrotactile input

Journal of Neurophysiology

van den Broeke EN, Mouraux A.

111(8):1564-73

2014

Single-trial time-frequency analysis of electrocortical signals: baseline correction and beyond

Neuroimage

Hu L, Xiao P, Zhang ZG, Mouraux A, Iannetti GD.

84:876-8

2014

Short trains of intra-epidermal electrical stimulation to elicit reliable behavioral and electrophysiological responses to the selective activation of nociceptors in humans

Neuroscience Letters

Mouraux A, Marot E, Legrain V.

561: 69-73

2013

Capturing with EEG the neural entrainment and coupling underlying sensorimotor synchronization to the beat

Cerebral Cortex

Nozaradan S, Zerouali Y, Peretz I, Mouraux A.

25(3):736-47

2013

Theta burst stimulation applied over primary motor and somatosensory cortices produces analgesia unrelated to the changes in nociceptive event-related potentials

PLoS ONE

Torta D, Legrain V, Algoet M, Olivier E, Duqué J, Mouraux A.

20; 8(8): e73263

2013

Unmasking the obligatory components of nociceptive event-related brain potentials

Journal of Neurophysiology

Mouraux A, De Paepe AL, Marot E, Plaghki L, Iannetti GD, Legrain V.

110(10):2312-24

Institute of Neuroscience (IONS) - Université catholique de Louvain (UCL)

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NOCIONS : PAIN RESEARCH AT UCLOUVAIN

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