[FieldTrip] Comparing ICA methods between toolboxes (BESA vs. Fieldtrip)
Harald Bornfleth
Harald.Bornfleth at besa.de
Mon Jan 18 13:49:32 CET 2016
Dear Andrew,
A couple of questions popped up.
1) The neck movement artifact, is this something with low frequency, or is it a muscle artifact?
2) Did you calculate the ICA on one data screen (e.g. 10 seconds or 20 seconds), or over the whole data set?
If you could send us screen shots showing the ICA wave forms and the accompanying topographies, then we could comment on the classification. (In BESA, you right-click on the label of a component and select “Map topography” to show the topography map of that component.)
I include my colleague and ICA expert Nicole Ille on CC.
Best regards,
Harald
From: c.andrew123 at gmail.com [mailto:c.andrew123 at gmail.com] On Behalf Of Andrew Chang
Sent: 17 January 2016 19:57
To: Harald.Bornfleth at besa.de; FieldTrip discussion list <fieldtrip at science.ru.nl>
Subject: Re: [FieldTrip] Comparing ICA methods between toolboxes (BESA vs. Fieldtrip)
Hi Dr. Bornfleth,
Thanks for your reply very much.
I would like to use ICA to remove eye blinks and eye movements, neck movements, as well as cardiac and powerline artifacts. The segment I have is a continuous EEG recording for 10 minutes, which is one block of my experiment including many trials.
Before ICA, the segment have been high-pass (0.3 Hz) and low-pass (100 Hz). The components showing activities around the eyes, the back of the neck, and 60 Hz were removed. As for the cardiac artifact, I it is based on visual inspection on the waveform to see whether it looks like an EKG.
Any further comments are appreciated!
Best,
Andrew
On Fri, Jan 15, 2016 at 8:35 AM, Harald Bornfleth <Harald.Bornfleth at besa.de <mailto:Harald.Bornfleth at besa.de> > wrote:
Dear Andrew,
Thanks for bringing this up. I can try to shed some light on the ICA method used in BESA Research; however, I can not comment on the implementation in FieldTrip.
The method behind ICA analysis in BESA Research is the extended infomax ICA algorithm (Lee TW et al.: Independent component analysis using an extended infomax algorithm for mixed sub-Gaussian and super-Gaussian sources. Neural Computation 11(2), 1999, 409-433). This algorithm is very well suited to remove cardiac and powerline artifacts. Depending on the data, it may also be used to remove ocular (blink) and electrode artifacts. To assess whether your artifact removal is trustworthy more information about your processing steps are needed. What types of artifacts are you trying to correct? What segments are you using to determine the artifact topographies and what segments are you finally correcting?
Best regards,
Harald
Dr. Harald Bornfleth
Product Manager BESA Research
BESA GmbH
Freihamer Strasse 18
82166 Graefelfing/Germany
http://www.besa.de
E: Harald.Bornfleth at besa.de <mailto:Harald.Bornfleth at besa.de>
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From: fieldtrip-bounces at science.ru.nl <mailto:fieldtrip-bounces at science.ru.nl> [mailto:fieldtrip-bounces at science.ru.nl] On Behalf Of Andrew Chang
Sent: Sonntag, 10. Januar 2016 21:18
To: fieldtrip at science.ru.nl <mailto:fieldtrip at science.ru.nl>
Subject: [FieldTrip] Comparing ICA methods between toolboxes (BESA vs. Fieldtrip)
Dear Fieldtrip users,
I am wondering whether anyone has compared the performances of the ICA methods among M/EEG toolboxes. Especially, how is the performance of ICA in BESA Research 6.0, compared to Fieldtrip?
I have an EEG data set which has been processed in BESA, including removing artifact using ICA. I am wondering whether I can trust it, or I should reprocess it in Fieldtrip. Any comments will be appreciated!
Happy new year!
Best,
Andrew
--
Andrew Chang
Ph.D. Candidate
Auditory Development Lab
Department of Psychology, Neuroscience & Behaviour
McMaster University
http://changa5.wordpress.com/
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--
Andrew Chang
Ph.D. Candidate
Auditory Development Lab
Department of Psychology, Neuroscience & Behaviour
McMaster University
http://changa5.wordpress.com/
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