Does EEG Montage Influence Alzheimer's Disease Electroclinic Diagnosis?
Author(s) -
Lucas R. Trambaiolli,
Ana Carolina Lorena,
Francisco J. Fraga,
Paulo Afonso Medeiros Kanda,
Ricardo Nitríni,
Renato Anghinah
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
international journal of alzheimer s disease
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.657
H-Index - 49
eISSN - 2090-8024
pISSN - 2090-0252
DOI - 10.4061/2011/761891
Subject(s) - electroencephalography , neuropsychology , neuroimaging , psychology , pattern recognition (psychology) , logistic regression , neuroscience , artificial intelligence , audiology , computer science , medicine , cognition
There is not a specific Alzheimer's disease (AD) diagnostic test. AD diagnosis relies on clinical history, neuropsychological, and laboratory tests, neuroimaging and electroencephalography. Therefore, new approaches are necessary to enable earlier and more accurate diagnosis and to measure treatment results. Quantitative EEG (qEEG) can be used as a diagnostic tool in selected cases. The aim of this study was to answer if distinct electrode montages have different sensitivity when differentiating controls from AD patients. We analyzed EEG spectral peaks (delta, theta, alpha, beta, and gamma bands), and we compared references (Biauricular, Longitudinal bipolar, Crossed bipolar, Counterpart bipolar, and Cz reference). Support Vector Machines and Logistic Regression classifiers showed Counterpart bipolar montage as the most sensitive electrode combination. Our results suggest that Counterpart bipolar montage is the best choice to study EEG spectral peaks of controls versus AD
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