Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4319234 | Brain Research Bulletin | 2011 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
We recently developed a telemetry system for recording neural activity in the brains of unrestrained pigs. To test the fidelity of waveform reproduction, we compared local field potentials in the temporal hippocampus of six pigs by simultaneous recording with a cable system. We analyzed differences between the telemetry and cabled data filtered through a low-cut filter at 1, 4, or 30Â Hz. Analysis of 10,000 data recorded while pigs were lying down showed a higher correlation with low-cut filtering at 4 or 30Â Hz than at 1Â Hz. Over 97% of differences in amplitude between the telemetry and cable data lay within the 95% confidence interval. Measurements were reproducible. A box plot of the differences clearly showed increased data symmetry and reduced skewness by low-cut filtering at 4 or 30Â Hz. Almost the same results were obtained in two animals during feeding. Thus, the local field potentials in the temporal hippocampus were telemetered with almost the same accuracy as by cable measurement during both resting and feeding. However, artifacts in the first 100Â ms (low-cut filtering at 1 or 4Â Hz) or 5Â ms (30Â Hz) of measurements had to be removed for analysis.
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Authors
Toshiyuki Saito, Sei-etsu Fujiwara, Katsuji Hisakura, Nobuhiro Ohkohchi, Tatsuo Akema, Soichiro Sasamori, Kenjiro Konno, Eiji Kobayashi, Takashi Yamaguchi,