Brain chirps: spectrographic signatures of epileptic seizures

SJ Schiff, D Colella, GM Jacyna, E Hughes…�- Clinical�…, 2000 - Elsevier
SJ Schiff, D Colella, GM Jacyna, E Hughes, JW Creekmore, A Marshall, M Bozek-Kuzmicki…
Clinical Neurophysiology, 2000Elsevier
Objective: A chirp is a brief signal within which the frequency content changes rapidly.
Spectrographic chirps are found in signals produced from many biological and physical
phenomena. In radar and sonar engineering, signals with chirps are used to localize
direction and range to the signal source. Although characteristic frequency changes during
epileptic seizures have long been observed, the correlation with chirps and chirp technology
seems never to have been made. Methods: We analyzed 19 404 s (1870 s of which were�…
Objective
A chirp is a brief signal within which the frequency content changes rapidly. Spectrographic chirps are found in signals produced from many biological and physical phenomena. In radar and sonar engineering, signals with chirps are used to localize direction and range to the signal source. Although characteristic frequency changes during epileptic seizures have long been observed, the correlation with chirps and chirp technology seems never to have been made.
Methods
We analyzed 19 404 s (1870 s of which were from 43 seizures) of intracranially (subdural and depth electrode) recorded digital EEG from 6 patients for the presence of spectral chirps. Matched filters were constructed from methods in routine use in non-medical signal processing applications.
Results
We found that chirps are very sensitive detectors of seizures (83%), and highly specific as markers (no false positive detections). The feasibility of using spectral chirps as matched filters was demonstrated.
Conclusions
Chirps are highly specific and sensitive spectrographic signatures of epileptic seizure activity. In addition, chirps may serve as templates for matched filter design to detect seizures, and as such, can demonstrate localization and propagation of seizures from an epileptic focus.
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