Detection of extracellular action potentials in noise for the control of microelectrode advancement
β Scribed by Robert P Scobey
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1983
- Weight
- 473 KB
- Volume
- 17
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0010-468X
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β¦ Synopsis
A digital computer was programmed to detect impulses in the presence of noise, rather than identify or classify impulse activity from microelectrodes. The analog signal was abstracted into a sequential series of voltage time vectors that measured peak-to-peak activity. The amplitude and time difference between a peak-positive potential and the next peak-negative potential defined one vector. The amplitude and time difference between that negative peak and the next positive peak defined the next vector, and so on. An algorithm determined if each successive vector was part of a signal pattern by comparing the properties of the vector to those in a stored list. The algorithm was designed for future application with minimum computer systems and multiple-tip microelectrodes.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
The distribution of the conduction velocities (DCV) of a peripheral nerve is a powerful diagnostic tool for the assessment of neuromuscular disorders. Its efficient calculation depends on the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of the acquired electroneurograms (ENGs), thus, time averaging is solely used. A