J 2004

Intracerebral ERP correlated with fMRI findings in the study of auditory oddball paradigms

BRÁZDIL, Milan, Martin DOBŠÍK, Michal MIKL, Pavel DANIEL, Marta PAŽOURKOVÁ et. al.

Basic information

Original name

Intracerebral ERP correlated with fMRI findings in the study of auditory oddball paradigms

Name in Czech

Intracerebrální ERP korelované s nálezy fMRI při studii Audio OddBall paradigmatu

Name (in English)

Intracerebral ERP correlated with fMRI findings in the study of auditory oddball paradigms

Authors

BRÁZDIL, Milan (203 Czech Republic), Martin DOBŠÍK (203 Czech Republic), Michal MIKL (203 Czech Republic, guarantor), Pavel DANIEL (203 Czech Republic), Marta PAŽOURKOVÁ (203 Czech Republic), Petr KRUPA (203 Czech Republic) and Ivan REKTOR (203 Czech Republic)

Edition

Clinical Neurophysiology, Dublin, Elsevier Science, 2004, 1388-2457

Other information

Language

Czech

Type of outcome

Článek v odborném periodiku

Field of Study

30000 3. Medical and Health Sciences

Country of publisher

Czech Republic

Confidentiality degree

není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství

Impact factor

Impact factor: 2.538

RIV identification code

RIV/00216224:14110/04:00010890

Organization unit

Faculty of Medicine

Keywords in English

fMRI; ERP; OddBall

Tags

Tags

International impact, Reviewed
Změněno: 29/11/2006 09:41, Ing. Pavel Daniel

Abstract

V originále

The method of functional MRI has recently been used for the study of cerebral generators of event-related potentials (ERP), specifically, the P3 wave. Surprisingly enough, some significant discrepancies were found between current fMRI data and the results of formerly published intracranial ERP studies. Hence, the authors launched the following study in order to assess the true potential of fMRI. Using the technique of event-related fMRI and subsequent intracerebral ERP registration, the authors studied in two sessions an auditory oddball task in 8 patients with intractable epilepsy.

In English

The method of functional MRI has recently been used for the study of cerebral generators of event-related potentials (ERP), specifically, the P3 wave. Surprisingly enough, some significant discrepancies were found between current fMRI data and the results of formerly published intracranial ERP studies. Hence, the authors launched the following study in order to assess the true potential of fMRI. Using the technique of event-related fMRI and subsequent intracerebral ERP registration, the authors studied in two sessions an auditory oddball task in 8 patients with intractable epilepsy.