freqdescriptives

Robert Oostenveld roberto at SMI.AUC.DK
Thu Nov 4 09:49:14 CET 2004


Hi Tom,

Thanks for the hint. There is also a DIPOLESIMULATION function in
FieldTrip. You probably will want to look into "private/axial2planar"
as well. I suppose that the most meaningfull simulation will be one in
which you compute forward on a axial gradiometer system, and on a
planar system. Then try MEGPLANAR to convert the axial data to
estimated planar data, and compare with real planar data. See the
attached script, which basically does it all...

I am curious as to what it will bring for different source parameters
and levels of simulated and real physiological (i.e. spatially
correlated) noise.

best regards,
Robert

-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: test_RO_014.m
Type: application/octet-stream
Size: 2227 bytes
Desc: not available
URL: <http://mailman.science.ru.nl/pipermail/fieldtrip/attachments/20041104/962faf13/attachment-0001.obj>
-------------- next part --------------



On 4 Nov 2004, at 5:07, Tom Holroyd wrote:

>> The simulation is certainly one important thing to do. I will ask our
>> MEG
>> scientist.
>
> Hmm.  I guess that's me.  :-)  I may as well mention here, that
> there's a VSM(CTF) program called "dsim" which can add a given
> simulated dipole (or several) to an existing dataset.  You can
> either start with an empty sensor noise recording, or live data.
> Then see if you can find it again.  :-)
>
> See also dsim -help.



More information about the fieldtrip mailing list