Number of the records: 1  

Detection of Interictal Epileptiform Discharges Using Signal Envelope Distribution Modelling: Application to Epileptic and Non-Epileptic Intracranial Recordings

  1. 1.
    0444936 - FGÚ 2016 RIV NL eng J - Journal Article
    Janča, R. - Ježdík, P. - Čmejla, R. - Tomášek, M. - Worrell, G. A. - Stead, M. - Wagenaar, J. - Jefferys, J. G. R. - Kršek, P. - Komárek, V. - Jiruška, Přemysl - Marusič, P.
    Detection of Interictal Epileptiform Discharges Using Signal Envelope Distribution Modelling: Application to Epileptic and Non-Epileptic Intracranial Recordings.
    Brain Topography. Roč. 28, č. 1 (2015), s. 172-183. ISSN 0896-0267. E-ISSN 1573-6792
    Grant - others:GA Mzd(CZ) NT11460
    Institutional support: RVO:67985823
    Keywords : spike detection * interictal epileptiform discharges * intracranial recording * automatic detection * Hilbert transform * principal component analysis
    Subject RIV: FH - Neurology
    Impact factor: 3.727, year: 2015

    Interictal epileptiform discharges (spikes, IEDs) are electrographic markers of epileptic tissue and their quantification is utilized in planning of surgical resection. Visual analysis of long-term multi-channel intracranial recordings is extremely laborious and prone to bias. Development of new and reliable techniques of automatic spike detection represents a crucial step towards increasing the information yield of intracranial recordings and to improve surgical outcome. In this study, we designed a novel and robust detection algorithm that adaptively models statistical distributions of signal envelopes and enables discrimination of signals containing IEDs from signals with background activity. This detector demonstrates performance superior both to human readers and to an established detector. It is even capable of identifying low-amplitude IEDs which are often missed by experts and which may represent an important source of clinical information. Application of the detector to non-epileptic intracranial data from patients with intractable facial pain revealed the existence of sharp transients with waveforms reminiscent of interictal discharges that can represent biological sources of false positive detections. Identification of these transients enabled us to develop and propose secondary processing steps, which may exclude these transients, improving the detector’s specificity and having important implications for future development of spike detectors in general
    Permanent Link: http://hdl.handle.net/11104/0247491

     
     
Number of the records: 1  

  This site uses cookies to make them easier to browse. Learn more about how we use cookies.