A validation of Emotiv EPOC Flex saline for EEG and ERP research

Background Previous work has validated consumer-grade electroencephalography (EEG) systems for use in research. Systems in this class are cost-effective and easy to set up and can facilitate neuroscience outside of the laboratory. The aim of the current study was to determine if a new consumer-grade...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Nikolas S. Williams, Genevieve M. McArthur, Bianca de Wit, George Ibrahim, Nicholas A. Badcock
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2020-08-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
EEG
ERP
MMN
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/9713.pdf
id doaj-6cab51b9490f4817bd02bc7e78f1280a
record_format Article
spelling doaj-6cab51b9490f4817bd02bc7e78f1280a2020-11-25T03:03:33ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592020-08-018e971310.7717/peerj.9713A validation of Emotiv EPOC Flex saline for EEG and ERP researchNikolas S. Williams0Genevieve M. McArthur1Bianca de Wit2George Ibrahim3Nicholas A. Badcock4Department of Cognitive Science, Macquarie University, Sydney, NSW, AustraliaDepartment of Cognitive Science, Macquarie University, Sydney, NSW, AustraliaDepartment of Cognitive Science, Macquarie University, Sydney, NSW, AustraliaDepartment of Cognitive Science, Macquarie University, Sydney, NSW, AustraliaDepartment of Cognitive Science, Macquarie University, Sydney, NSW, AustraliaBackground Previous work has validated consumer-grade electroencephalography (EEG) systems for use in research. Systems in this class are cost-effective and easy to set up and can facilitate neuroscience outside of the laboratory. The aim of the current study was to determine if a new consumer-grade system, the Emotiv EPOC Saline Flex, was capable of capturing research-quality data. Method The Emotiv system was used simultaneously with a research-grade EEG system, Neuroscan Synamps2, to collect EEG data across 16 channels during five well-established paradigms: (1) a mismatch negativity (MMN) paradigm that involved a passive listening task in which rare deviant (1,500 Hz) tones were interspersed amongst frequent standard tones (1,000 Hz), with instructions to ignore the tones while watching a silent movie; (2) a P300 paradigm that involved an active listening task in which participants were asked to count rare deviant tones presented amongst frequent standard tones; (3) an N170 paradigm in which participants were shown images of faces and watches and asked to indicate whether the images were upright or inverted; (4) a steady-state visual evoked potential (SSVEP) paradigm in which participants passively viewed a flickering screen (15 Hz) for 2 min; and (5) a resting state paradigm in which participants sat quietly with their eyes open and then closed for 3 min each. Results The MMN components and P300 peaks were equivalent between the two systems (BF10 = 0.25 and BF10 = 0.26, respectively), with high intraclass correlations (ICCs) between the ERP waveforms (>0.81). Although the N170 peak values recorded by the two systems were different (BF10 = 35.88), ICCs demonstrated that the N170 ERP waveforms were strongly correlated over the right hemisphere (P8; 0.87–0.97), and moderately-to-strongly correlated over the left hemisphere (P7; 0.52–0.84). For the SSVEP, the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) was larger for Neuroscan than Emotiv EPOC Flex (19.94 vs. 8.98, BF10 = 51,764), but SNR z-scores indicated a significant brain response at the stimulus frequency for both Neuroscan (z = 12.47) and Flex (z = 11.22). In the resting state task, both systems measured similar alpha power (BF10 = 0.28) and higher alpha power when the eyes were closed than open (BF10 = 32.27). Conclusions The saline version of the Emotiv EPOC Flex captures data similar to that of a research-grade EEG system. It can be used to measure reliable auditory and visual research-quality ERPs. In addition, it can index SSVEP signatures and is sensitive to changes in alpha oscillations.https://peerj.com/articles/9713.pdfEEGERPEmotivValidationMMNP300
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nikolas S. Williams
Genevieve M. McArthur
Bianca de Wit
George Ibrahim
Nicholas A. Badcock
spellingShingle Nikolas S. Williams
Genevieve M. McArthur
Bianca de Wit
George Ibrahim
Nicholas A. Badcock
A validation of Emotiv EPOC Flex saline for EEG and ERP research
PeerJ
EEG
ERP
Emotiv
Validation
MMN
P300
author_facet Nikolas S. Williams
Genevieve M. McArthur
Bianca de Wit
George Ibrahim
Nicholas A. Badcock
author_sort Nikolas S. Williams
title A validation of Emotiv EPOC Flex saline for EEG and ERP research
title_short A validation of Emotiv EPOC Flex saline for EEG and ERP research
title_full A validation of Emotiv EPOC Flex saline for EEG and ERP research
title_fullStr A validation of Emotiv EPOC Flex saline for EEG and ERP research
title_full_unstemmed A validation of Emotiv EPOC Flex saline for EEG and ERP research
title_sort validation of emotiv epoc flex saline for eeg and erp research
publisher PeerJ Inc.
series PeerJ
issn 2167-8359
publishDate 2020-08-01
description Background Previous work has validated consumer-grade electroencephalography (EEG) systems for use in research. Systems in this class are cost-effective and easy to set up and can facilitate neuroscience outside of the laboratory. The aim of the current study was to determine if a new consumer-grade system, the Emotiv EPOC Saline Flex, was capable of capturing research-quality data. Method The Emotiv system was used simultaneously with a research-grade EEG system, Neuroscan Synamps2, to collect EEG data across 16 channels during five well-established paradigms: (1) a mismatch negativity (MMN) paradigm that involved a passive listening task in which rare deviant (1,500 Hz) tones were interspersed amongst frequent standard tones (1,000 Hz), with instructions to ignore the tones while watching a silent movie; (2) a P300 paradigm that involved an active listening task in which participants were asked to count rare deviant tones presented amongst frequent standard tones; (3) an N170 paradigm in which participants were shown images of faces and watches and asked to indicate whether the images were upright or inverted; (4) a steady-state visual evoked potential (SSVEP) paradigm in which participants passively viewed a flickering screen (15 Hz) for 2 min; and (5) a resting state paradigm in which participants sat quietly with their eyes open and then closed for 3 min each. Results The MMN components and P300 peaks were equivalent between the two systems (BF10 = 0.25 and BF10 = 0.26, respectively), with high intraclass correlations (ICCs) between the ERP waveforms (>0.81). Although the N170 peak values recorded by the two systems were different (BF10 = 35.88), ICCs demonstrated that the N170 ERP waveforms were strongly correlated over the right hemisphere (P8; 0.87–0.97), and moderately-to-strongly correlated over the left hemisphere (P7; 0.52–0.84). For the SSVEP, the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) was larger for Neuroscan than Emotiv EPOC Flex (19.94 vs. 8.98, BF10 = 51,764), but SNR z-scores indicated a significant brain response at the stimulus frequency for both Neuroscan (z = 12.47) and Flex (z = 11.22). In the resting state task, both systems measured similar alpha power (BF10 = 0.28) and higher alpha power when the eyes were closed than open (BF10 = 32.27). Conclusions The saline version of the Emotiv EPOC Flex captures data similar to that of a research-grade EEG system. It can be used to measure reliable auditory and visual research-quality ERPs. In addition, it can index SSVEP signatures and is sensitive to changes in alpha oscillations.
topic EEG
ERP
Emotiv
Validation
MMN
P300
url https://peerj.com/articles/9713.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT nikolasswilliams avalidationofemotivepocflexsalineforeeganderpresearch
AT genevievemmcarthur avalidationofemotivepocflexsalineforeeganderpresearch
AT biancadewit avalidationofemotivepocflexsalineforeeganderpresearch
AT georgeibrahim avalidationofemotivepocflexsalineforeeganderpresearch
AT nicholasabadcock avalidationofemotivepocflexsalineforeeganderpresearch
AT nikolasswilliams validationofemotivepocflexsalineforeeganderpresearch
AT genevievemmcarthur validationofemotivepocflexsalineforeeganderpresearch
AT biancadewit validationofemotivepocflexsalineforeeganderpresearch
AT georgeibrahim validationofemotivepocflexsalineforeeganderpresearch
AT nicholasabadcock validationofemotivepocflexsalineforeeganderpresearch
_version_ 1724685169526308864