EEGs Vary Less Between Lab and Home Locations Than They Do Between People

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Abstract

Given the rapid development of light weight EEG devices which we have witnessed the past decade, it is reasonable to ask to which extent neuroscience could now be taken outside the lab. In this study, we have designed an EEG paradigm well suited for deployment “in the wild.” The paradigm is tested in repeated recordings on 20 subjects, on eight different occasions (4 in the laboratory, 4 in the subject's own home). By calculating the inter subject, intra subject and inter location variance, we find that the inter location variation for this paradigm is considerably less than the inter subject variation. We believe the paradigm is representative of a large group of other relevant paradigms. This means that given the positive results in this study, we find that if a research paradigm would benefit from being performed in less controlled environments, we expect limited problems in doing so.

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Mikkelsen, K. B., Tabar, Y. R., Christensen, C. B., & Kidmose, P. (2021). EEGs Vary Less Between Lab and Home Locations Than They Do Between People. Frontiers in Computational Neuroscience, 15. https://doi.org/10.3389/fncom.2021.565244

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