INTERFERENCE OF TONIC MUSCLE ACTIVITY ON THE EEG: A SINGLE MOTOR UNIT STUDY

The electrical activity of muscles can interfere with the electroencephalogram (EEG) signal considering the anatomical locations of facial or masticatory muscles surrounding the skull. In this study, we evaluated the possible interference of the resting activity of the temporalis muscle on the EEG u...

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Main Authors: Gizem eYilmaz, Pekcan eUngan, Oguz eSebik, Paulius eUgincius, KEMAL SITKI TURKER
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2014-07-01
Series:Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnhum.2014.00504/full
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spelling doaj-133f602586e64f9da807a362971e4ed62020-11-25T02:19:28ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Human Neuroscience1662-51612014-07-01810.3389/fnhum.2014.0050498696INTERFERENCE OF TONIC MUSCLE ACTIVITY ON THE EEG: A SINGLE MOTOR UNIT STUDYGizem eYilmaz0Pekcan eUngan1Oguz eSebik2Paulius eUgincius3KEMAL SITKI TURKER4KOC UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF MEDICINEKOC UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF MEDICINEKOC UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF MEDICINELithuanian University of Health SciencesKOC UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF MEDICINEThe electrical activity of muscles can interfere with the electroencephalogram (EEG) signal considering the anatomical locations of facial or masticatory muscles surrounding the skull. In this study, we evaluated the possible interference of the resting activity of the temporalis muscle on the EEG under conventional EEG recording conditions. In 9 healthy adults EEG activity from 19 scalp locations and single motor unit (SMU) activity from anterior temporalis muscle were recorded in three relaxed conditions; eyes open, eyes closed, jaw dropped. The EEG signal was spike triggered averaged (STA) using the action potentials of SMUs as triggers to evaluate their reflections at various EEG recording sites. Resting temporalis SMU activity generated prominent reflections with different amplitudes, reaching maxima in the proximity of the recorded SMU. Interference was also notable at the scalp sites that are relatively far from the recorded SMU and even at the contralateral locations. Considering the great number of SMUs in the head and neck muscles, prominent contamination from the activity of only a single MU should indicate the susceptibility of EEG to muscle activity artifacts even under the rest conditions. This study emphasizes the need for efficient artifact evaluation methods which can handle muscle interference.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnhum.2014.00504/fullinterferenceElectroencephalogramelectromyogramMuscle Artifactsingle motor unit
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gizem eYilmaz
Pekcan eUngan
Oguz eSebik
Paulius eUgincius
KEMAL SITKI TURKER
spellingShingle Gizem eYilmaz
Pekcan eUngan
Oguz eSebik
Paulius eUgincius
KEMAL SITKI TURKER
INTERFERENCE OF TONIC MUSCLE ACTIVITY ON THE EEG: A SINGLE MOTOR UNIT STUDY
Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
interference
Electroencephalogram
electromyogram
Muscle Artifact
single motor unit
author_facet Gizem eYilmaz
Pekcan eUngan
Oguz eSebik
Paulius eUgincius
KEMAL SITKI TURKER
author_sort Gizem eYilmaz
title INTERFERENCE OF TONIC MUSCLE ACTIVITY ON THE EEG: A SINGLE MOTOR UNIT STUDY
title_short INTERFERENCE OF TONIC MUSCLE ACTIVITY ON THE EEG: A SINGLE MOTOR UNIT STUDY
title_full INTERFERENCE OF TONIC MUSCLE ACTIVITY ON THE EEG: A SINGLE MOTOR UNIT STUDY
title_fullStr INTERFERENCE OF TONIC MUSCLE ACTIVITY ON THE EEG: A SINGLE MOTOR UNIT STUDY
title_full_unstemmed INTERFERENCE OF TONIC MUSCLE ACTIVITY ON THE EEG: A SINGLE MOTOR UNIT STUDY
title_sort interference of tonic muscle activity on the eeg: a single motor unit study
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
issn 1662-5161
publishDate 2014-07-01
description The electrical activity of muscles can interfere with the electroencephalogram (EEG) signal considering the anatomical locations of facial or masticatory muscles surrounding the skull. In this study, we evaluated the possible interference of the resting activity of the temporalis muscle on the EEG under conventional EEG recording conditions. In 9 healthy adults EEG activity from 19 scalp locations and single motor unit (SMU) activity from anterior temporalis muscle were recorded in three relaxed conditions; eyes open, eyes closed, jaw dropped. The EEG signal was spike triggered averaged (STA) using the action potentials of SMUs as triggers to evaluate their reflections at various EEG recording sites. Resting temporalis SMU activity generated prominent reflections with different amplitudes, reaching maxima in the proximity of the recorded SMU. Interference was also notable at the scalp sites that are relatively far from the recorded SMU and even at the contralateral locations. Considering the great number of SMUs in the head and neck muscles, prominent contamination from the activity of only a single MU should indicate the susceptibility of EEG to muscle activity artifacts even under the rest conditions. This study emphasizes the need for efficient artifact evaluation methods which can handle muscle interference.
topic interference
Electroencephalogram
electromyogram
Muscle Artifact
single motor unit
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnhum.2014.00504/full
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