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  2. Electroencephalography functional magnetic resonance imaging

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electroencephalography...

    EEG-fMRI (short for EEG-correlated fMRI or electroencephalography-correlated functional magnetic resonance imaging) is a multimodal neuroimaging technique whereby EEG and fMRI data are recorded synchronously for the study of electrical brain activity in correlation with haemodynamic changes in brain during the electrical activity, be it normal function or associated with disorders.

  3. Electroencephalography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electroencephalography

    EEG measures the brain's electrical activity directly, while other methods record changes in blood flow (e.g., SPECT, fMRI, fUS) or metabolic activity (e.g., PET, NIRS), which are indirect markers of brain electrical activity. EEG can be used simultaneously with fMRI or fUS so that high-temporal-resolution data can be recorded at the same time ...

  4. Event-related potential - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Event-related_potential

    The EEG proved to be a useful source in recording brain activity over the ensuing decades. However, it tended to be very difficult to assess the highly specific neural process that are the focus of cognitive neuroscience because using pure EEG data made it difficult to isolate individual neurocognitive processes. Event-related potentials (ERPs ...

  5. Theta wave - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theta_wave

    Due to the density of its neural layers, the hippocampus generates some of the largest EEG signals of any brain structure. In some situations the EEG is dominated by regular waves at 4–10 Hz, often continuing for many seconds. This EEG pattern is known as the hippocampal theta rhythm. It has also been called Rhythmic Slow Activity (RSA), to ...

  6. Spike-and-wave - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spike-and-wave

    Epileptic encephalopathies are a group of conditions that result in deterioration of sensory, cognitive, and motor functions due to consistent epileptic activity. Lennox-Gastaut syndrome (LGS) is a childhood epileptic encephalopathy characterized with generalized seizures and slow spike-wave activity while awake. LGS is a combination of atonic ...

  7. K-complex - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/K-complex

    They are generated in widespread cortical locations [1] though they tend to predominate over the frontal parts of the brain. [5] Both K-complex and delta wave activity in stage 2 sleep create slow-wave (0.8 Hz) and delta (1.6–4.0 Hz) oscillations. However, their topographical distribution is different, and the delta power of K-complexes is ...

  8. Hypnogram - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypnogram

    It was developed as an easy way to present the recordings of the brain wave activity from an electroencephalogram (EEG) during a period of sleep. It allows the different stages of sleep: rapid eye movement sleep (REM) and non-rapid eye movement sleep (NREM) to be identified during the sleep cycle. NREM sleep can be further classified into NREM ...

  9. Microsleep - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microsleep

    Microsleeps have EEG shift to slower frequencies (from alpha to theta waves). [27] Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) A functional neuroimaging procedure using MRI technology that measures brain activity by detecting associated changes in blood flow (detects what regions of brain are active during microsleep events). [28 ...