Pre-stimulus spectral EEG patterns and the visual evoked response. Brandt, E, M., Jansen, H, B., Carbonari, & P, J. Electroencephalography and clinical neurophysiology, 80(1):16--20, February, 1991. PMID: 1703944abstract bibtex The relationship between the latencies and amplitudes of the N1 and P2 components of the visual evoked potential (VEP) and the psychophysiological state of the brain immediately preceding the time of the stimulus has been investigated in 7 male subjects. Power spectral measures in the delta, theta, alpha and beta bands of the 1 sec pre-stimulus EEG were used to assess the brain state, and low intensity flashes, delivered randomly between 2 and 6 whole seconds, were used as the stimuli. Trials were ranked separately according to the relative amounts of pre-stimulus power in each EEG band and were partitioned into groups by an equal pre-stimulus spectral power criterion. Averaged EPs were computed from these groups and multiple regression analysis was used to relate pre-stimulus spectral power values to EP features. Five of the 7 subjects displayed consistent increases in N1-P2 amplitude as a function of increasing pre-stimulus relative alpha power. The between-subjects effect of pre-stimulus EEG on N1 latency was small, but was moderate for P2 latency (both significant). Both N1 and P2 latency were found to decrease with increasing amounts of pre-stimulus relative delta and theta power.
@article{ brandt_pre-stimulus_1991,
title = {Pre-stimulus spectral {EEG} patterns and the visual evoked response},
volume = {80},
issn = {0013-4694},
abstract = {The relationship between the latencies and amplitudes of the N1 and P2 components of the visual evoked potential ({VEP)} and the psychophysiological state of the brain immediately preceding the time of the stimulus has been investigated in 7 male subjects. Power spectral measures in the delta, theta, alpha and beta bands of the 1 sec pre-stimulus {EEG} were used to assess the brain state, and low intensity flashes, delivered randomly between 2 and 6 whole seconds, were used as the stimuli. Trials were ranked separately according to the relative amounts of pre-stimulus power in each {EEG} band and were partitioned into groups by an equal pre-stimulus spectral power criterion. Averaged {EPs} were computed from these groups and multiple regression analysis was used to relate pre-stimulus spectral power values to {EP} features. Five of the 7 subjects displayed consistent increases in N1-P2 amplitude as a function of increasing pre-stimulus relative alpha power. The between-subjects effect of pre-stimulus {EEG} on N1 latency was small, but was moderate for P2 latency (both significant). Both N1 and P2 latency were found to decrease with increasing amounts of pre-stimulus relative delta and theta power.},
language = {eng},
number = {1},
journal = {Electroencephalography and clinical neurophysiology},
author = {Brandt, M E and Jansen, B H and Carbonari, J P},
month = {February},
year = {1991},
note = {{PMID:} 1703944},
keywords = {Adult, Brain, Evoked Potentials, Visual, Humans, Male, Photic Stimulation, electroencephalography},
pages = {16--20}
}
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{"_id":{"_str":"527b54dc5e011a4c4b000925"},"__v":0,"authorIDs":[],"author_short":["Brandt","E, M.","Jansen","H, B.","Carbonari","P, J."],"bibbaseid":"brandt-e-jansen-h-carbonari-p-prestimulusspectraleegpatternsandthevisualevokedresponse-1991","bibdata":{"html":"<div class=\"bibbase_paper\"> \n\n\n<span class=\"bibbase_paper_titleauthoryear\">\n\t<span class=\"bibbase_paper_title\"><a name=\"brandt_pre-stimulus_1991\"> </a>Pre-stimulus spectral EEG patterns and the visual evoked response.</span>\n\t<span class=\"bibbase_paper_author\">\nBrandt; E, M.; Jansen; H, B.; Carbonari; and P, J.</span>\n\t<!-- <span class=\"bibbase_paper_year\">1991</span>. -->\n</span>\n\n\n\n<i>Electroencephalography and clinical neurophysiology</i>,\n\n80(1):16--20.\n\nFebruary 1991.\n\n\nPMID: 1703944.\n\n<br class=\"bibbase_paper_content\"/>\n\n<span class=\"bibbase_paper_content\">\n \n \n \n <a href=\"javascript:showBib('brandt_pre-stimulus_1991')\"\n class=\"bibbase link\">\n <!-- <img src=\"http://bibbase.org/img/filetypes/bib.png\" -->\n\t<!-- alt=\"Pre-stimulus spectral EEG patterns and the visual evoked response [bib]\" -->\n\t<!-- class=\"bibbase_icon\" -->\n\t<!-- style=\"width: 24px; height: 24px; border: 0px; vertical-align: text-top\"><span class=\"bibbase_icon_text\">Bibtex</span> -->\n BibTeX\n <i class=\"fa fa-caret-down\"></i></a>\n \n \n \n <a class=\"bibbase_abstract_link bibbase link\"\n href=\"javascript:showAbstract('brandt_pre-stimulus_1991')\">\n Abstract\n <i class=\"fa fa-caret-down\"></i></a>\n \n \n \n\n \n \n \n</span>\n\n<div class=\"well well-small bibbase\" id=\"bib_brandt_pre_stimulus_1991\"\n style=\"display:none\">\n <pre>@article{ brandt_pre-stimulus_1991,\n title = {Pre-stimulus spectral {EEG} patterns and the visual evoked response},\n volume = {80},\n issn = {0013-4694},\n abstract = {The relationship between the latencies and amplitudes of the N1 and P2 components of the visual evoked potential ({VEP)} and the psychophysiological state of the brain immediately preceding the time of the stimulus has been investigated in 7 male subjects. Power spectral measures in the delta, theta, alpha and beta bands of the 1 sec pre-stimulus {EEG} were used to assess the brain state, and low intensity flashes, delivered randomly between 2 and 6 whole seconds, were used as the stimuli. Trials were ranked separately according to the relative amounts of pre-stimulus power in each {EEG} band and were partitioned into groups by an equal pre-stimulus spectral power criterion. Averaged {EPs} were computed from these groups and multiple regression analysis was used to relate pre-stimulus spectral power values to {EP} features. Five of the 7 subjects displayed consistent increases in N1-P2 amplitude as a function of increasing pre-stimulus relative alpha power. The between-subjects effect of pre-stimulus {EEG} on N1 latency was small, but was moderate for P2 latency (both significant). Both N1 and P2 latency were found to decrease with increasing amounts of pre-stimulus relative delta and theta power.},\n language = {eng},\n number = {1},\n journal = {Electroencephalography and clinical neurophysiology},\n author = {Brandt, M E and Jansen, B H and Carbonari, J P},\n month = {February},\n year = {1991},\n note = {{PMID:} 1703944},\n keywords = {Adult, Brain, Evoked Potentials, Visual, Humans, Male, Photic Stimulation, electroencephalography},\n pages = {16--20}\n}</pre>\n</div>\n\n\n<div class=\"well well-small bibbase\" id=\"abstract_brandt_pre_stimulus_1991\"\n style=\"display:none\">\n The relationship between the latencies and amplitudes of the N1 and P2 components of the visual evoked potential (VEP) and the psychophysiological state of the brain immediately preceding the time of the stimulus has been investigated in 7 male subjects. Power spectral measures in the delta, theta, alpha and beta bands of the 1 sec pre-stimulus EEG were used to assess the brain state, and low intensity flashes, delivered randomly between 2 and 6 whole seconds, were used as the stimuli. Trials were ranked separately according to the relative amounts of pre-stimulus power in each EEG band and were partitioned into groups by an equal pre-stimulus spectral power criterion. Averaged EPs were computed from these groups and multiple regression analysis was used to relate pre-stimulus spectral power values to EP features. Five of the 7 subjects displayed consistent increases in N1-P2 amplitude as a function of increasing pre-stimulus relative alpha power. The between-subjects effect of pre-stimulus EEG on N1 latency was small, but was moderate for P2 latency (both significant). Both N1 and P2 latency were found to decrease with increasing amounts of pre-stimulus relative delta and theta power.\n</div>\n\n\n</div>\n","downloads":0,"bibbaseid":"brandt-e-jansen-h-carbonari-p-prestimulusspectraleegpatternsandthevisualevokedresponse-1991","role":"author","year":"1991","volume":"80","type":"article","title":"Pre-stimulus spectral EEG patterns and the visual evoked response","pages":"16--20","number":"1","note":"PMID: 1703944","month":"February","language":"eng","keywords":"Adult, Brain, Evoked Potentials, Visual, Humans, Male, Photic Stimulation, electroencephalography","key":"brandt_pre-stimulus_1991","journal":"Electroencephalography and clinical neurophysiology","issn":"0013-4694","id":"brandt_pre-stimulus_1991","bibtype":"article","bibtex":"@article{ brandt_pre-stimulus_1991,\n title = {Pre-stimulus spectral {EEG} patterns and the visual evoked response},\n volume = {80},\n issn = {0013-4694},\n abstract = {The relationship between the latencies and amplitudes of the N1 and P2 components of the visual evoked potential ({VEP)} and the psychophysiological state of the brain immediately preceding the time of the stimulus has been investigated in 7 male subjects. Power spectral measures in the delta, theta, alpha and beta bands of the 1 sec pre-stimulus {EEG} were used to assess the brain state, and low intensity flashes, delivered randomly between 2 and 6 whole seconds, were used as the stimuli. Trials were ranked separately according to the relative amounts of pre-stimulus power in each {EEG} band and were partitioned into groups by an equal pre-stimulus spectral power criterion. Averaged {EPs} were computed from these groups and multiple regression analysis was used to relate pre-stimulus spectral power values to {EP} features. Five of the 7 subjects displayed consistent increases in N1-P2 amplitude as a function of increasing pre-stimulus relative alpha power. The between-subjects effect of pre-stimulus {EEG} on N1 latency was small, but was moderate for P2 latency (both significant). Both N1 and P2 latency were found to decrease with increasing amounts of pre-stimulus relative delta and theta power.},\n language = {eng},\n number = {1},\n journal = {Electroencephalography and clinical neurophysiology},\n author = {Brandt, M E and Jansen, B H and Carbonari, J P},\n month = {February},\n year = {1991},\n note = {{PMID:} 1703944},\n keywords = {Adult, Brain, Evoked Potentials, Visual, Humans, Male, Photic Stimulation, electroencephalography},\n pages = {16--20}\n}","author_short":["Brandt","E, M.","Jansen","H, B.","Carbonari","P, J."],"author":["Brandt","E, M","Jansen","H, B","Carbonari","P, J"],"abstract":"The relationship between the latencies and amplitudes of the N1 and P2 components of the visual evoked potential (VEP) and the psychophysiological state of the brain immediately preceding the time of the stimulus has been investigated in 7 male subjects. Power spectral measures in the delta, theta, alpha and beta bands of the 1 sec pre-stimulus EEG were used to assess the brain state, and low intensity flashes, delivered randomly between 2 and 6 whole seconds, were used as the stimuli. Trials were ranked separately according to the relative amounts of pre-stimulus power in each EEG band and were partitioned into groups by an equal pre-stimulus spectral power criterion. Averaged EPs were computed from these groups and multiple regression analysis was used to relate pre-stimulus spectral power values to EP features. Five of the 7 subjects displayed consistent increases in N1-P2 amplitude as a function of increasing pre-stimulus relative alpha power. The between-subjects effect of pre-stimulus EEG on N1 latency was small, but was moderate for P2 latency (both significant). Both N1 and P2 latency were found to decrease with increasing amounts of pre-stimulus relative delta and theta power."},"bibtype":"article","biburl":"http://bibbase.org/zotero/nbusch","downloads":0,"search_terms":["pre","stimulus","spectral","eeg","patterns","visual","evoked","response","brandt","e","jansen","h","carbonari","p"],"title":"Pre-stimulus spectral EEG patterns and the visual evoked response","year":1991,"dataSources":["9Wz8i3YBFkeJte2aR"]}