Part 4: Monitoring EEG during Task
EEG recordings are highly sensitive to various sources of noise and artifacts, which can compromise data quality. This guide provides an overview of common issues that arise during EEG data collection, how to visually identify them, and best practices for handling them.
🕺 Participant Movement
PROBLEM
Movement artifacts are among the most common sources of noise in EEG. This could stem from a variety of sources such as:
fidgeting, shifting posture, or speaking can cause sudden jumps in the EEG signal
large muscle movements (e.g., jaw clenching, head tilts, scratching) introduce high-amplitude distortions
smaller repetitive movements (foot tapping) can rhythmically distort the signal and add motor cortex artifacts.
Regardless, any sort of movement will always lead to added noise into our signal, which is generally undesirable.
VISUAL INDICATORS
Visually, movements can vary in their presentation, depending on their origin. These can include:
large spikes or sharp deflections in the signal.
abrupt discontinuities in multiple channels.
periods of high-frequency noise due to muscle tension.
a repetitive, wave-like pulse that reflects rhythmic micro-movements such as foot-tapping.
Aside from the EEG's characteristics, you will also always be able to identify movement by the particpant moving.
BEST PRACTICES
💥 Bad Electrodes
PROBLEM
Some electrodes may carry high noise in their signal despite low impedance. This could stem from a variety of reasons including:
electrode is sitting on a pulsating vein (i.e. picking up heart rate)
the participant has residual conditioner or sweat in their hair
the electrode is located in a high-movement area (cheeks/ears/eyes)
the electrode has reached its demise
Regardless of the reason, bad electrodes are a major barrier in later spatial analysis, if not handled correctly.
VISUAL INDICATORS
Visually, a bad electrode is usually quite obvious. These indicators include:
the electrode signal line is moving all over the screen
the electrode has repetitive pattern (heart beat/pulse/breath)
the electrode is much bolder than the rest
Again, an individual bad electrode will stick out like a sore thumb relative to all others. It is important to note that we might see these patterns across a consecutive set of electrodes as well (i.e.
BEST PRACTICES
🔋 Electrical Noise
PROBLEM
Electromagnetic interference (EMI) from external sources can introduce periodic or constant noise in EEG recordings. Common sources include:
Power lines (50/60 Hz noise).
Electronic devices (phones, monitors, chargers).
Poor grounding of EEG equipment.
These issues will usually be evident right from the begininng of the recording - after impedances have been checked and fixed.
VISUAL INDICATORS
Electrical noise is usually euqally distributed across ALL channels, and is a systemic problem.
A consistent high-frequency oscillation (50/60 Hz).
Noise present in multiple channels at once.
Waveform distortion that is synchronized with the power cycle.
In other words, the electrodes will look 64 wavy twins.
BEST PRACTICES
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