Stimulus-induced narrow-band gamma oscillations in humans can be recorded using open-hardware low-cost EEG amplifier
Stimulus-induced narrow-band gamma oscillations in humans can be recorded using open-hardware low-cost EEG amplifier
Abstract Stimulus-induced narrow-band gamma oscillations (30–70 Hz) in human electro - encephalograph (EEG) have been linked to attentional and memory mechanisms and are abnormal in mental health conditions such as autism, schizophrenia and Alzheimer’s Disease. This suggests that gamma oscillations could be valuable both as a research tool and an inexpensive, non-invasive biomarker for disease evaluation. However, since the absolute power in EEG decreases rapidly with increasing frequency following a “1/f” power law, and the gamma band includes line noise frequency, these oscillations are highly susceptible to instrument noise. Previous studies that recorded stimulus-induced gamma oscillations used expensive research-grade EEG amplifiers to address this issue. While low-cost EEG amplifiers have become popular in Brain Computer Interface applications that mainly rely on low-frequency oscillations (< 30 Hz) or steady-state-visually-evoked-potentials, whether they can also be used to measure stimulus-induced gamma oscillations is unknown. We recorded EEG signals using a low-cost, open-source amplifier (OpenBCI) and a traditional, research-grade amplifier (Brain Products GmbH) in male (N = 6) and female (N = 5) subjects (22–29 years) while they viewed full-screen static gratings that are known to induce gamma oscillations. OpenBCI recordings showed gamma response in almost all the subjects who showed a gamma response in Brain Products recordings, and the spectral and temporal profiles of these responses in alpha (8–13 Hz) and gamma bands were highly correlated between OpenBCI and Brain Products recordings. These results suggest that low-cost amplifiers can potentially be used in stimulus induced gamma response detection, making its research, and application in medicine more accessible.
Pattisapu Srividya、Ray Supratim
Centre for Neuroscience, Indian Institute of ScienceCentre for Neuroscience, Indian Institute of Science
神经病学、精神病学基础医学生物科学研究方法、生物科学研究技术
EEGGamma OscillationsOpenBCI
Pattisapu Srividya,Ray Supratim.Stimulus-induced narrow-band gamma oscillations in humans can be recorded using open-hardware low-cost EEG amplifier[EB/OL].(2025-03-28)[2025-05-16].https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2021.11.16.468841.点此复制
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