Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3048217 Clinical Neurophysiology 2007 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

ObjectiveWhen EEG is recorded in humans, the question arises whether the resting EEG remains stable. We compared the inter-individual variation in spectral observables to the intra-individual stability over more than a year.MethodsWe recorded resting EEG in 55 healthy adults with eyes closed. In 20 persons EEG was recorded in a second session with retest intervals 12–40 months. For electrodes AFz, Cz and Pz α peak frequency and α peak height were transformed into Z-scores. We compared the curve shape of power spectra by first aligning α peaks to 10 Hz and then regressing spectra pairwise onto each other to calculate a t-value.The t-value and differences of Z-scores for all pairs of sessions were entered into a generalized linear model (GLM) where binary output represents the recognition probability. The results were cross-validated by out-of-sample testing.ResultsOf the 40 sessions, 35 were correctly matched. The shape of power spectra contributed most to recognition. Out of all 2960 pairwise comparisons 99.5% were correct, with sensitivity 88% and specificity 99.5%.ConclusionsOur statistical apparatus allows to identify those spectral EEG observables which qualify as statistical signature of a person.SignificanceThe effect of external factors on EEG observables can be contrasted against their normal variability over time.

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