Advertising

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There is blatant advertising going on here. This page should be about imparting information on ERP, not advertising a summer school at Bangor University, or various training courses — Preceding unsigned comment added by 212.88.58.192 (talk) 22:42, 16 May 2016 (UTC)Reply

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please see suggestion to merge the "evoked potential" page into this page [1] —The preceding unsigned comment was added by Robert p levy (talkcontribs) 01:56, 2 February 2007 (UTC).<! This is not a good idea, since evoked potentials are but a limited class of the brain responses assciated with voluntary movements and cognitive processes, including language processing. This change would reduce the scope of human brain responses that can be extracted from the electroencephaoogram by event-related averaging and other methods. This topic should embrace the broadest range of electrophydiolical manifestations of spcific human brain processes. The term "event related poentials (ERPs) meets this criterion, whers "evoked potential" does not tReply

Typo?

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I do not get the sense of this sentence: "... the brain response to a single stimulus or event of interest is usually visible in the EEG recording of a single trial; to see the brain response to the stimulus, the experimenter must conduct many trials..." I guess that "not" is missing in the first part of the sentence.—Preceding unsigned comment added by 195.113.187.94 (talk) 13:25, 24 February 2009

Fixed. 13:58, 24 February 2009 (UTC)

New Issue: Is there some subtlety about the phrase "accurately measure correctly"? It appears to be a redundancy, but I want to make sure before I remove it.

Same as evoked potential?

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In the course of taking a neuroanatomy course we learned that Event-Related Potentials are "brief changes in EEG signals in response to discrete sensory stimulus". According to eMedicine "Evoked potentials are the electrical signals generated by the nervous system in response to sensory stimuli". They each indicate that they are responses to sensory stimuli. Thus I am confused as to how they differ and, moreover, the reason for two distinct articles. Thoughts? Basket of Puppies 00:37, 29 June 2009 (UTC)Reply

In real life, a lot of people use them more or less interchangeably (with the general idea that "evoked potential" is an older word for "event-related potential"). Actually there is a difference, but it's a bit confusing. "Event-related potentials" are a tbroad group of effects, and include both "evoked potentials" and "induced potentials". Evoked potentials are the subject of by far the most research (at least in my field, neurolinguistics); there are only a few articles out there discussing induced potentials. WP currently has no article on induced potentials (and its articles on event-related potentials and evoked potentials both need a lot of work, as well.
The difference is more or less this. Evoked potentials are electrophysiological components (ie, peaks and valleys in the EEG squiggle) that are time-locked to the onset of a stimulus. In other words, you play 1,000 beeps to a person, and take a picture of the potential that happens after every beep; then you take each of those pictures and put them on top of one another, so that the time when the beep happened is the same in every one (this is the time-locking), and average them together, and what is left is an evoked potential: an average of all the electrophysiological activity, with respect to the onset of the stimulus.
Induced potentials, on the other hand, are also electrophysiological components, but they are time-locked to the component itself (could be its peak or its onset) rather than the stimulus. In other words, you play all those beeps and line up all the pictures, but instead of making them line up on the stimulus, you make the components themselves all line up—in trial 12 the component might have happened at 75 milliseconds, in trial 89 it might have been 90 milliseconds, etc. The averaged waveform you get is an induced potential. The idea behind this is that some brain responses are a bit "wiggly"—they don't always happen at the same speed relative to their stimulus—and thus don't show up in evoked potential analysis (since they don't all peak at the same time, they get "averaged out"). Induced potentials, supposedly, might allow us to investigate some ERP components that we have been ignoring for a couple decades because we were focused on evoked potentials. (At least, that is what you will hear from people who believe induced potentials are a promising new field.)
If there are any inaccuracies in this description, hopefully someone else watching this page can clarify things. rʨanaɢ talk/contribs 01:38, 29 June 2009 (UTC)Reply
Ok, after reading this a few times I think I now understand. I am actually tempted to discuss this further with my neuroanatomy prof. Thanks for the speedy reply, Rjanag! Basket of Puppies 02:22, 29 June 2009 (UTC)Reply
Heh, I don't fully understand induced potentials, either :). Another interesting distinction similar to this one is the distinction between time-domain analysis and frequency-domain analysis, which your professor might bring up when you talk to him/her. (The simple, cartoon explanation is that you generally use time-domain analysis to look at evoked potentials, and frequency-domain analysis to look at induced potentials. Basically, in time-domain analysis you are interested in activity happening at different times—for example, the N400 versus the N100 versus the ELAN—whereas in frequency-domain analysis you are interested in activity happening in different frequency ranges, regardless of what time it happens.) rʨanaɢ talk/contribs 02:44, 29 June 2009 (UTC)Reply
RJanag's explanation should be added somewhere in one of these two articles, because for the moment they just link to each other without any clarification to what is what. Even a single line in Event-related potential mentioning that evoked potentials and induced potentials are subclasses of ERPs would be tremendously useful. Lrq3000 (talk) 16:15, 2 January 2017 (UTC)Reply

"ERPs are measured with EEG"

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They can (and frequently are) measured via electrocorticograms (ECoG), which is basically an EEG performed underneath the skull. This absolute statement might want to be widened. (See, for example, "A Direct Brain Interface Based On Event-Related Potentials" by Levine, 2000.) —Preceding unsigned comment added by 152.3.196.217 (talk) 01:34, 24 June 2010 (UTC)Reply

Possible problem at N2 tab page

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The N2 dab page currently says that N2 may mean "an ERP component in the 200-300 ms poststimulus range". This seems to contradict the article here, which says that the number after the N is a number of milliseconds. Also, if 200-300 ms is a typical range, is N2 a realistic figure? I know nothing about this subject area, but perhaps an expert is watching this page. -- John of Reading (talk) 06:42, 2 May 2011 (UTC)Reply

There are two kinds of notation; the number may refer to a millisecond range, in which case people may use the full number (N200, P300, N400, P600) or may truncate it for efficiency (just calling those same components "N2", "P3", etc.; N400 and P600 are not truncated to "N4" and "P6" as often but it happens a bit). It also may refer to that component's being the nth component after some event. (For example, visually-presented words are often followed by an N1-P2 complex which often occurs well before 200 ms). This can be clarified in the article; I know Luck (2004) has a discussion of nomenclature in the introductory chapter. rʨanaɢ (talk) 13:38, 2 May 2011 (UTC)Reply
I've clarified this in the article; thanks for pointing out the inconsistency. rʨanaɢ (talk) 14:30, 6 May 2011 (UTC)Reply

"Hemodynamic" tests in Spatial and temporal resolution

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It is not accurate to call fMRI and PET scan hemodynamic tests. In medicine, a hemodynamic test measures some hemodynamic variable, e.g. blood pressure, flow, etc. fMRI and PET measure metabolism, which secondarily will depend on both local and systemic blood flow, which contributes to a delay in metabolic responses, but no one in medicine labels fMRI or PET scan as hemodynamic tests. Pollira (talk) 22:51, 23 August 2017 (UTC)Reply

Reward‐related positivity

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There is a paper mentioning that it's possible to measure reward positivity with Muse (headband).

There are some article explaining it, like: The reward positivity: From basic research on reward to a biomarker for depression

I appreciate if some with more knowledge in the area and could create an article about it, thanks. —Arthurfragoso (talk) 23:21, 23 June 2019 (UTC)Reply

Brown, Colin M; Peter Hagoort (1999). "The cognitive neuroscience of language". In Colin M. Brown and Peter Hagoort (ed.). The Neurocognition of Language. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 6.

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Can someone reproduce that page here? (Under all international copyright law we can pull that page).

I am highly suspicious of a claim made 6 pages into a treatise as a citation, that's not where one puts relevant citations.

Can a neutral observer validate this? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 109.155.137.132 (talk) 18:31, 16 May 2020 (UTC)Reply