Remote Detection of Human Electroencephalograms Using Ultrahigh Input Impedance Electric Potential Sensors, by Hartland and Clark, October 2002

Remote Detection of Human Electroencephalograms Using Ultrahigh Input Impedance Electric Potential Sensors, by Hartland and Clark, October 2002

Abstract and Figures

In this letter, we demonstrate the use of very high performance, ultrahigh impedance, electric potential probes in the detection of electrical activity in the brain. We show that these sensors, requiring no electrical or physical contact with the body, can be used to monitor the human electroencephalogram (EEG) revealing, as examples, the alpha and beta rhythms and the alpha blocking phenomenon. We suggest that the advantages offered by these sensors compared with the currently used contact (Ag/AgCl) electrodes may act to stimulate new developments in multichannel EEG monitoring and in real-time electrical imaging of the brain. (C) 2002 American Institute of Physics.

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