DocumentCode
1212995
Title
Analysis of the Electromagnetic Signals of the Human Brain: Milestones, Obstacles, and Goals
Author
Gevins, Alan S.
Author_Institution
EEG Systems Laboratory
Issue
12
fYear
1984
Firstpage
833
Lastpage
850
Abstract
Measuring the functioning of the human brain is one of the most formidable scientific/engineering endeavors ever undertaken. It is difficult to extract information about any particular processing function from brain electromagnetic signals (BEMS) since, at any instant, only a small fraction of the brain´s hundreds of simultaneously active major systems might be performing processing related to the function being studied. With recent developments, a new era of research is dawning based on an interdisciplinary approach in which advanced signal processing methods are focused on increasingly more specific neuroanatomical, neurophysiological, and neuropsychological research questions and clinical applications. This brief review highlights the major accomplishments of the last several decades in human BEMS analysis and discusses obstacles to progress. Five main topics are addressed: 1) the historical problem of developing a computerized expert clinical electroencephalogram (EEG) system; 2) advances in signal processing methods, including primary analysis, feature extraction, and statistical hypothesis testing and pattern classification; 3) integrated computing systems for BEMS analysis; 4) biophysical, basic science, practical and conceptual obstacles to progress; and 5) the long-term goal of developing a device for measuring the functional integrity of major neural systems, and the related topic of neurocybernetics. Cutting-edge issues discussed include measurement and modeling of nonstationary event-related signals, characterization of spatial processes, single-trial signal detection, location of the sources of scalp-recorded field distributions, and studies of the functional significance of BEMS.
Keywords
Application software; Biomedical signal processing; Data mining; Electroencephalography; Electromagnetic analysis; Electromagnetic measurements; Humans; Pattern analysis; Signal analysis; Signal processing; Brain; Computers; Diagnosis, Computer-Assisted; Electroencephalography; Electromagnetics; Evoked Potentials; Humans; Pattern Recognition, Automated;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9294
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TBME.1984.325246
Filename
4121781
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