Title :
Measurement and analysis of electroencephalogram (EEG) on audiovisual interaction for early clinical detection of neuropsychological disorder
Author :
Yang, Jingjing ; Li, Qi ; Wu, Jinglong
Author_Institution :
Biomed. Eng. Lab., Okayama Univ., Okayama, Japan
Abstract :
The clinical diagnosis can detect the presence of brain disease once significant neuronal disruption has occurred. Early clinical detection of neuropsychological disorder lacks the unification standards. The aim of this study was to describe the neural mechanism of audiovisual interaction in healthy subjects by combining behavior-based methods (neuropsychological testing) and event-related potentials (ERP), and to provide a neural mechanism for early clinical detection. We designed the stimulus onset asynchrony (SOA) between sound and visual (-400 ms, -150 ms, 0 ms, 150 ms, 400 ms, visual only and sound only, each with equal probability, randomly in each trial), so that the subject could not find the cognitive rules connecting the two stimuli. The behavioral results showed that the responses to temporal congruency audiovisual (AV) stimuli were faster than those to unimodal visual(V) stimuli. The ERPs results showed audiovisual interaction elicited by irrelevant auditory(A) stimuli in a visual attention task. This interaction occurred at late stage around 220~240 ms and 340~380 ms.
Keywords :
auditory evoked potentials; electroencephalography; medical disorders; neurophysiology; patient diagnosis; visual evoked potentials; EEG analysis; EEG measurement; ERP; audiovisual interaction neural mechanism; behavior based methods; brain disease; clinical diagnosis; early clinical neuropsychological disorder detection; electroencephalogram; event related potentials; irrelevant auditory stimuli; neuronal disruption; neuropsychological testing; stimulus onset asynchrony; temporal congruency audiovisual stimuli; time 0 ms; time 150 ms; time 400 ms; unimodal visual stimuli; visual attention task; Brain; Electrodes; Electroencephalography; Gratings; Joining processes; Semiconductor optical amplifiers; Visualization; audiovisual interaction; electroencephalogram (EEG); neuropsychological disorder;
Conference_Titel :
Biomedical Engineering and Informatics (BMEI), 2010 3rd International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Yantai
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-6495-1
DOI :
10.1109/BMEI.2010.5639552