Title : 
Magnetoencephalographic data indicates separate component modeling is necessary in evaluating evoked responses
         
        
        
            Author_Institution : 
Armstrong Aerosp. Med. Res. Lab., Wright-Patterson AFB, OH, USA
         
        
        
        
        
        
            Abstract : 
A double Gaussian model was used to estimate dipole source contributions to magnetocephalograms. The method was tested using four 2-mm-long dipoles fixed in conductive material enclosed within the human skull. Evoked responses were simulated by Gaussian activation of one dipole with a mean latency of 100 ms and a second dipole at 200 ms. Simulations were performed over the left temporal bone and the occipital bone. Source contributions to each resultant waveform were estimated as the amplitude parameters of a best-fit double Gaussian function. Comparing dipole inverse solutions from waveform peaks with those from estimated contributions revealed only a small difference in localization accuracy. Source strength is slightly better estimated using the component-model method. The peak picking method overestimated strength when dipoles were aligned and underestimated when they were opposed
         
        
            Keywords : 
biomagnetism; brain models; component-model method; conductive material; dipole inverse solutions; double Gaussian model; evoked responses evaluation; human skull; left temporal bone; localization accuracy; magnetoencephalography; occipital bone; peak picking method; separate component modeling; waveform peaks; Brain modeling; Conducting materials; Delay; Magnetic field measurement; Magnetic heads; Magnetic separation; Magnetic shielding; Neurons; Skull; X-ray imaging;
         
        
        
        
            Conference_Titel : 
Bioengineering Conference, 1989., Proceedings of the 1989 Fifteenth Annual Northeast
         
        
            Conference_Location : 
Boston, MA
         
        
        
            DOI : 
10.1109/NEBC.1989.36711