Special Feature

User Panel

My Panel

My Panel

Bookmark Science Articles

Recent News
Bookmark / Share This Science Site

A novel stimulus artifact removal technique for high-rate electrical stimulation.

A novel stimulus artifact removal technique for high-rate electrical stimulation. Research Abstract Details 

Research Abstract Table of Contents

Jump to the:

  • Abstract Text of This Paper
  • Journal Published
  • MeSH Keywords of This Abstract
  • Chemicals and Substances Used in this Paper
  • Grants and Granting Agency of this Research
  • Database Accession Numbers Used in this Paper
  • Related Papers
  • Related Research Tags
  • Rate this Research Paper
  • A novel stimulus artifact removal technique for high-rate electrical stimulation. Abstract Text:

    Electrical stimulus artifact corrupting electrophysiological recordings often makes the subsequent analysis of the underlying neural response difficult. This is particularly evident when investigating short-latency neural activity in response to high-rate electrical stimulation. We developed and evaluated an off-line technique for the removal of stimulus artifact from electrophysiological recordings. Pulsatile electrical stimulation was presented at rates of up to 5000pulses/s during extracellular recordings of guinea pig auditory nerve fibers. Stimulus artifact was removed by replacing the sample points at each stimulus artifact event with values interpolated along a straight line, computed from neighbouring sample points. This technique required only that artifact events be identifiable and that the artifact duration remained less than both the inter-stimulus interval and the time course of the action potential. We have demonstrated that this computationally efficient sample-and-interpolate technique removes the stimulus artifact with minimal distortion of the action potential waveform. We suggest that this technique may have potential applications in a range of electrophysiological recording systems.

    A novel stimulus artifact removal technique for high-rate electrical stimulation. Publishing Authors By Initials

    For similar abstracts research abstracts see: abstracts research

    PUBMED ID PMID:

    MEDLINE DATE:

    A novel stimulus artifact removal technique for high-rate electrical stimulation. Journal Published:

    PUBLICATION TYPE: Journal Article

    Journal: Journal of neuroscience methods

    VOLUME: 170

    Page Numbers: 277-84

    Journal Abbreviation: J. Neurosci. Methods

    ISSN: 0165-0270

    DAY: 3

    MONTH: 02

    YEAR: 2008

    A novel stimulus artifact removal technique for high-rate electrical stimulation. Information

    Number of References:

    LANGUAGE: eng

    NlmUniqueID: 7905558

    A novel stimulus artifact removal technique for high-rate electrical stimulation. Keywords Mesh Terms:

    KEYWORDS:

    MESH TERMS:

    Chemical & Substance for Abstract: A novel stimulus artifact removal technique for high-rate electrical stimulation. Information

    Substance Name:

    Registry Number:

    Grant and Affiliation Information for A novel stimulus artifact removal technique for high-rate electrical stimulation.

    AFFILIATION: Department of Otolaryngology, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia.

    Country: Netherlands

    Netherlands Research PublicationNetherlands Research Publication

    AGENCY:

    GRANT:

    ACRONYM:

    MEDLINETA: J Neurosci Methods

    REFSOURCE:

    DATABASENAME:

    ACCESSION NUMBER:

    Number Hits: 0

    A novel stimulus artifact removal technique for high-rate electrical stimulation Related Publications

     

    Molecular Station USER Menu

    Welcome to Molecular Station!

    You have to register before you can post on our forums or use our advanced features. Register Now! Its Free and Fast!

    Already registered? Login now below.

    User Name:

    Password:

    Already registered and Forgot your password? Click below to recover it.

    Recover Lost Password

    Join now - it's fast and free!

    Molecular Station is THE largest network of researchers, scientists and science lovers anywhere!

    Research Terms of Usage and Disclaimer
    Home
    Features

    Protocols

    DNA Forum

    Science Forum

    DNA Forum
    Biology Forum

    Science News


    [CaRP] XML error: Invalid document end at line 2

    For more click here:Science News