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Bayesian estimation of evoked and induced responses — Karl Friston (2006) | RDL Network
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Bayesian estimation of evoked and induced responses
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Karl Friston
University College London, University of London
Bayesian estimation of evoked and induced responses
Article
2006
en
Authors
+1 more
Karl Friston
University College London
RH
Richard N. Henson
CP
Christophe Phillips
Abstract
1 min read
Abstract We describe an extension of our empirical Bayes approach to magnetoencephalography/electroencephalography (MEG/EEG) source reconstruction that covers both evoked and induced responses. The estimation scheme is based on classical covariance component estimation using restricted maximum likelihood (ReML). We have focused previously on the estimation of spatial covariance components under simple assumptions about the temporal correlations. Here we extend the scheme, using temporal basis functions to place constraints on the temporal form of the responses. We show how the same scheme can estimate evoked responses that are phase‐locked to the stimulus and induced responses that are not. For a single trial the model is exactly the same. In the context of multiple trials, however, the inherent distinction between evoked and induced responses calls for different treatments of the underlying hierarchical multitrial model. We derive the respective models and show how they can be estimated efficiently using ReML. This enables the Bayesian estimation of evoked and induced changes in power or, more generally, the energy of wavelet coefficients. Hum Brain Mapp, 2006. © 2006 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
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