Publication | Open Access
The correlation dimension: A useful objective measure of the transient visual evoked potential?
40
Citations
67
References
2008
Year
NeuropsychologySocial SciencesVisual CognitionCorrelation DimensionTransient VepCognitive ElectrophysiologyNeurologyUseful Objective MeasureCognitive NeuroscienceOphthalmologyPhysiological OpticNeuroimagingVision ResearchVisual PathwaySurrogate TestingVisual ProcessingColor ConstancyVisual FunctionComputational NeuroscienceBrain ElectrophysiologyNeuroscienceMedicine
Visual evoked potentials (VEPs) may be analyzed by examination of the morphology of their components, such as negative (N) and positive (P) peaks. However, methods that rely on component identification may be unreliable when dealing with responses of complex and variable morphology; therefore, objective methods are also useful. One potentially useful measure of the VEP is the correlation dimension. Its relevance to the visual system was investigated by examining its behavior when applied to the transient VEP in response to a range of chromatic contrasts (42%, two times psychophysical threshold, at psychophysical threshold) and to the visually unevoked response (zero contrast). Tests of nonlinearity (e.g., surrogate testing) were conducted. The correlation dimension was found to be negatively correlated with a stimulus property (chromatic contrast) and a known linear measure (the Fourier-derived VEP amplitude). It was also found to be related to visibility and perception of the stimulus such that the dimension reached a maximum for most of the participants at psychophysical threshold. The latter suggests that the correlation dimension may be useful as a diagnostic parameter to estimate psychophysical threshold and may find application in the objective screening and monitoring of congenital and acquired color vision deficiencies, with or without associated disease processes.
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