Generalized framework for stimulus artifact removal

Yaara Erez, Hadass Tischler, Anan Moran, Izhar Bar-Gad*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

67 Scopus citations

Abstract

Stimulation is extensively used in neuroscience research in diverse fields ranging from cognitive to clinical. Studying the effect of electrical and magnetic stimulation on neuronal activity is complicated by large stimulation-derived artifacts on the recording electrodes, which mask the spiking activity. Multiple studies have suggested a variety of solutions for the removal of artifacts and were typically directed at specific stimulation setups. In this study we introduce a generalized framework for stimulus artifacts removal, the Stimulus Artifact Removal Graphical Environment (SARGE). The framework provides an encapsulated environment for a multi-stage removal process, starting from the stimulus pulse detection, through estimation of the artifacts and their removal, and finally to signal reconstruction and the assessment of removal quality. The framework provides the user with subjective graphical and objective quantitative tools for assessing the resulting signal, and the ability to adjust the process to optimize the results. This extendable publicly available framework supports different types of stimulation, stimulation patterns and shapes, and a variety of artifact estimation methods. We exemplify the removal of artifacts generated by electrical micro- and macro-stimulation and magnetic stimulation and different stimulation protocols. The use of different estimation methods, such as averaging and function fitting is demonstrated, and the differences between them are discussed. Finally, the quality of removal is assessed and validated using quantitative measures and combined experimental-simulation studies. The framework marks a shift from " algorithm" and " data" centric approach to a " workflow" centric approach, thus introducing an innovative concept to the artifact removal process.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)45-59
Number of pages15
JournalJournal of Neuroscience Methods
Volume191
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 2010
Externally publishedYes

Funding

FundersFunder number
ISF Converging Technologies1698-07
Israel Science Foundation1000-05
Ministeriet Sundhed Forebyggelse3-4033

    Keywords

    • Artifact removal
    • Electrical stimulation
    • Extracellular recording
    • Magnetic stimulation
    • SARGE
    • Stimulation artifact

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