Abstract / truncated to 115 words (read the full abstract)

A complex physical system like the human brain can only be comprehended by the use of a combination of various medical imaging techniques, each of which shed light on only a specific aspect of the neural processes that take place beneath the skull. Electroencephalography (EEG) and functional magnetic resonance (fMRI) are two such modalities, which enable the study of brain (dys)function. While the EEG is measured with a limited set of scalp electrodes which record rapid electrical changes resulting from neural activity, fMRI offers a superior spatial resolution at the expense of only picking up slow fluctuations of oxygen concentration that takes place near active brain cells. Hence, combining these very complementary modalities is an ... toggle 2 keywords

tensor eeg-fmri

Information

Author
Van Eyndhoven, Simon
Institution
KU Leuven
Supervisors
Publication Year
2020
Upload Date
Feb. 13, 2023

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