Publication | Open Access
Corneo-retinal-dipole and eyelid-related eye artifacts can be corrected offline and online in electroencephalographic and magnetoencephalographic signals
54
Citations
42
References
2020
Year
Optic NerveElectroencephalographySocial SciencesM/eeg ActivityRetinaCognitive ElectrophysiologyEyelid-related Eye ArtifactsOphthalmologyNeuroimagingVision ResearchEye ArtifactsBrain-computer InterfaceVisual FunctionNeurophysiologyEeg Signal ProcessingEye TrackingCalibration DataNeuroscienceGlaucomaBrain ElectrophysiologyMagnetoencephalographic SignalsMedicine
Eye movements and blinks contaminate electroencephalographic (EEG) and magnetoencephalographic (MEG) activity. As the eye moves, the corneo-retinal dipole (CRD) and eyelid introduce potential/field changes in the M/EEG activity. These eye artifacts can affect a brain-computer interface and thereby impinge on neurofeedback quality. Here, we introduce the sparse generalized eye artifact subspace subtraction (SGEYESUB) algorithm that can correct these eye artifacts offline and in real time. We provide an open source reference implementation of the algorithm and the paradigm to obtain calibration data. Once the algorithm is fitted to calibration data (approx. 5 min), the eye artifact correction reduces to a matrix multiplication. We compared SGEYESUB with 4 state-of-the-art algorithms using M/EEG activity of 69 participants. SGEYESUB achieved the best trade-off between correcting the eye artifacts and preserving brain activity. Residual correlations between the corrected M/EEG channels and the eye artifacts were below 0.1. Error-related and movement-related cortical potentials were attenuated by less than 0.5 μV. Our results furthermore demonstrate that CRD and eyelid-related artifacts can be assumed to be stationary for at least 1-1.5 h, validating the feasibility of our approach in offline and online eye artifact correction.
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