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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Establishing correlations of scalp field maps with other experimental variables using covariance analysis and resampling methods.

TLDR
Covariance mapping combined with bootstrapping methods has high statistical power and yields unique and directly interpretable results in EEG/MEG scalp data analysis.
About
This article is published in Clinical Neurophysiology.The article was published on 2008-06-01 and is currently open access. It has received 45 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Covariance & Resampling.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Ragu: a free tool for the analysis of EEG and MEG event-related scalp field data using global randomization statistics

TL;DR: The aim of Ragu is to maximize statistical power while minimizing the need for a-priori choices of models and parameters (like inverse models or sensors of interest) that interact with and bias statistics.
Journal ArticleDOI

A method to determine the presence of averaged event-related fields using randomization tests.

TL;DR: A simple and effective method to test whether an event consistently activates a set of brain electric sources across repeated measurements of event-related scalp field data, called topographic consistency test (TCT).
Journal ArticleDOI

Topographic electrophysiological signatures of FMRI Resting State Networks.

TL;DR: The data supports the physiological and neuronal origin of the RSNs and substantiates the assumption that the standard EEG frequency bands and their topographies can be seen as electrophysiological signatures of underlying distributed neuronal networks.
Journal ArticleDOI

A tutorial on data-driven methods for statistically assessing ERP topographies.

TL;DR: A randomization-based procedure that works without assigning grand-mean microstate prototypes to individual data, and shows an increased robustness to noise, and a higher sensitivity for more subtle effects of microstate timing, is proposed.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Random field-union intersection tests for EEG/MEG imaging.

TL;DR: This work introduces statistical tests for assessing simultaneously the significance of spatiotemporal event-related potential/event-related field (ERP/ERF) components and their sources and that of their sources.
Journal ArticleDOI

High resolution evoked potentials of cognition

Alan Gevins
- 01 Jan 1996 - 
TL;DR: The precision of four methods of quantifying neuroelectric signals has been improved by increasing EEG spatial sampling, using up to 124 electrodes, and by accurate anatomical registration of the EEG with Magnetic Resonance Images (MRIs).
Related Papers (5)
Frequently Asked Questions (5)
Q1. What contributions have the authors mentioned in the paper "Establishing correlations of scalp field maps with other experimental variables using covariance analysis and resampling methods" ?

The authors introduce a procedure to identify spatially extended scalp fields that correlate with some external, continuous measure ( reaction-time, performance, clinical status ) and to test their significance. The authors formally deduce that the channel-wise covariance of some experimental variable with scalp field data directly represents intracerebral sources associated with that variable. The authors furthermore show how the significance of such a representation can be tested with resampling techniques. The introduced methodology overcomes some of the ‘ traditional ’ statistical problems in EEG/MEG scalp data analysis. In a sample analysis of real data, the authors found that foreign-language evoked ERP data were significantly associated with foreign-language proficiency. 

Seventy-four channel ERPs were collected in 10 English-speaking exchange students to Switzerland while reading single-German words. 

The amplitudes of the estimated covariance map b depend on the variance of V, on the variance of X, and on the strength of the relation between V and X. 

In order to establish the statistical significance of such difference maps, one can either use the standard multivariate statistical approaches such as MANOVA (Vasey and Thayer, 1987). 

Increasing the number of subjects or electrodes improves the sensitivity of the method, and effects can be detected at lower SNRs.