[Eeglablist] How many epochs to average for the ERP

Tom Campbell tom_campbell75 at hotmail.com
Thu Aug 30 13:35:21 PDT 2012

















Good call Tarik. P300 seems a good high amplitude component to start testing a lab out with on one healthy young adult using some form of oddball paradigm, before making adjustments to the lab. Trying out the real macoy is a good place to start. The right number of trials to get a the signal:noise needed will depend on your lab and how you set it up. In practise, not every factor that causes noise can be always be identified, controlled, or eliminated. Various tests involving a bucket or even a melon can be revealing about sources of external noise if this becomes a concern. T.
 
 
 From: tarikbelbahar at gmail.com
Date: Wed, 29 Aug 2012 17:56:25 -0700
Subject: Re: [Eeglablist] How many epochs to average for the ERP
To: ith at deakin.edu.au
CC: eeglablist at sccn.ucsd.edu; tom_campbell75 at hotmail.com

If you're just starting off for the first time,please do yourself a favor and read the wholeERP bible, not just the ten commandments.
hope this helps you a bit.


search your topic on google scholar.read and depend on multiple articles in high-level journalsby the experts on your topic.This is a necessary step in designing any study

and making your research effective in possibly contributing to current questions or problems.
searching p300 number of trials on Google Scholar gives: 
Please read  the articles below closely...




On the number of trials needed for P300



J Cohen, J Polich - International Journal of Psychophysiology, 1997 - Elsevier 




Event-related potentials in clinical research: guidelines for eliciting, recording, and quantifying mismatch negativity, P300, and N400



CC Duncan, RJ Barry, JF Connolly, C Fischer¡­ - Clinical ¡­, 2009 - Elsevier


On the number of trials needed for a stable feedback©\related negativity



J Marco©\Pallares, D Cucurell, TF M¨¹nte¡­ - ¡­, 2011 - Wiley Online Library
Also please note that there is a movement in EEG/ERP research to explode the ERP,and understand topics such as single-trial variability,

variability within subjects, and even more simply,visualizing single-trial EEG via tools such as eeglab's erpimage.

last, if you want to test your EEG system,

I suggest you read Steve Luck's Chapteron Setting up a Lab, and that you do testing to check your hardware, connections,stimulus timing, etc... Good luck and let the list know

how things go!






















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