Authors
Tim M Tierney, Andrew Levy, Daniel N Barry, Sofie S Meyer, Yoshihito Shigihara, Matt Everatt, Stephanie Mellor, Jose David Lopez, Sven Bestmann, Niall Holmes, Gillian Roberts, Ryan M Hill, Elena Boto, James Leggett, Vishal Shah, Matthew J Brookes, Richard Bowtell, Eleanor A Maguire, Gareth R Barnes
Publication date
2021/1/15
Journal
NeuroImage
Volume
225
Pages
117443
Publisher
Academic Press
Description
Traditional magnetoencephalographic (MEG) brain imaging scanners consist of a rigid sensor array surrounding the head; this means that they are maximally sensitive to superficial brain structures. New technology based on optical pumping means that we can now consider more flexible and creative sensor placement. Here we explored the magnetic fields generated by a model of the human hippocampus not only across scalp but also at the roof of the mouth. We found that simulated hippocampal sources gave rise to dipolar field patterns with one scalp surface field extremum at the temporal lobe and a corresponding maximum or minimum at the roof of the mouth. We then constructed a fitted dental mould to accommodate an Optically Pumped Magnetometer (OPM). We collected data using a previously validated hippocampal-dependent task to test the empirical utility of a mouth-based sensor, with an …
Total citations
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