Authors
Johannes Vorwerk, Jae-Hyun Cho, Stefan Rampp, Hajo Hamer, Thomas R Knösche, Carsten H Wolters
Publication date
2014/10/15
Journal
NeuroImage
Volume
100
Pages
590-607
Publisher
Academic Press
Description
For accurate EEG/MEG source analysis it is necessary to model the head volume conductor as realistic as possible. This includes the distinction of the different conductive compartments in the human head. In this study, we investigated the influence of modeling/not modeling the conductive compartments skull spongiosa, skull compacta, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), gray matter, and white matter and of the inclusion of white matter anisotropy on the EEG/MEG forward solution. Therefore, we created a highly realistic 6-compartment head model with white matter anisotropy and used a state-of-the-art finite element approach. Starting from a 3-compartment scenario (skin, skull, and brain), we subsequently refined our head model by distinguishing one further of the above-mentioned compartments. For each of the generated five head models, we measured the effect on the signal topography and signal magnitude both in …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
J Vorwerk, JH Cho, S Rampp, H Hamer, TR Knösche… - NeuroImage, 2014