1.Forensic Application of Objective Assessment on Visual Acuity by ERP.
Bin LUO ; Meng Meng JI ; Huan Huan MENG ; Xi Ping CHEN ; Lu Yang TAO
Journal of Forensic Medicine 2017;33(3):232-235
OBJECTIVES:
To explore the composition characteristic of event related potential (ERP) in different visual acuity levels, and to provide theoretical basis for the objective assessment of visual acuity.
METHODS:
Monocular stimulus was performed on 16 selected subjects. The subjects were required to look straight at the screen ahead and count the amount of stimuli from different directions. The pictures of optotype stimulus which corresponding to three different visual acuity levels were showed in the center of the screen. The ERP results were recorded separately.
RESULTS:
(1) The P₁ amplitudes of match stimuli recorded under the supra-threshold visual acuity level were higher than that of match stimuli recorded under the threshold and sub-threshold visual acuity levels. There was no significant difference between the P₁ amplitudes of match stimuli recorded under the threshold and sub-threshold visual acuity levels. The tendency of conflict stimuli was similar to that of match stimuli under three visual acuity levels. (2) In the 340-500 ms post-stimulus range, P₃₀₀ component was found under supra-threshold and threshold visual acuity levels; no P₃₀₀ component was found in corresponding time window under sub-threshold visual acuity. The differences of P₃₀₀ amplitudes among three visual acuity levels were statistically significant. The amplitudes from high to low were the supra-threshold, threshold and sub-threshold visual acuity levels.
CONCLUSIONS
ERP can be a potential new method for the objective assessment of visual acuity in forensic medicine.
Adult
;
Evoked Potentials
;
Evoked Potentials, Visual
;
Humans
;
Photic Stimulation
;
Visual Acuity/physiology*
;
Visual Perception
2.Effect of Different Attentional Conditions on ERP Detection of Visual Acuity.
Huan Huan MENG ; Bin LUO ; Telati SIYIT ; Meng Meng JI ; Xi Ping CHEN ; Ge Fei SHI ; Lu Yang TAO
Journal of Forensic Medicine 2017;33(2):125-128
OBJECTIVES:
To study the effect of different attentional conditions on the event-related potential (ERP) components generated by the visual information stimuli related to visual acuity, and provide a theoretical reference for clinical forensic visual objective evaluation.
METHODS:
With visual acuity optotypes as normal form of visual information stimuli, 15 volunteers as study subjects were supposed to account the visual acuity optotypes under the attentional condition of visual stimuli. Furthermore, the subjects were required to listen to the storytelling carefully under the non-attentional condition of visual stimuli, and after the examination, they needed to answer the story-related questions. All the EEG results of two different attentional conditions from the subjects were recorded by 32 channel ERP system.
RESULTS:
Under two attentional conditions, P₁ and P₃₀₀ components were evoked by the visual acuity optotypes on supra-threshold and threshold visual acuity levels, while only P₁ component were evoked by the visual acuity optotypes on sub-threshold levels. In the ERP waveforms evoked by the visual acuity optotypes on supra-threshold, P₁ and P₃₀₀ amplitudes under attentional condition were larger than that under non-attentional condition.
CONCLUSIONS
Attentional conditions can influence the detection of visual acuity. P₃₀₀ component can be used to distinguish the visual acuity levels with supra-threshold and sub-threshold under non-attentional condition.
Attention/physiology*
;
Electroencephalography
;
Evoked Potentials
;
Evoked Potentials, Visual
;
Humans
;
Visual Acuity
3.Single visual-evoked potential estimation based on sparse decomposition.
Ting FU ; Yongjian LIU ; Dezhong YAO
Journal of Biomedical Engineering 2005;22(5):1036-1039
Iterative weighted sparse decomposition is a method to determine the weight coefficients of the minimum l1 norm optimization in accord with the two-scale relationship of the white noise in the multiresolution wavelet structure and to gradually suppress the influence of the strong noises through an iteration operation. The single-trial Visual Evoked Potential(VEP) estimation results confirmed the effectiveness of the method, and thus supported the viewpoint that the results of the single VEP estimation were different.
Evoked Potentials
;
physiology
;
Evoked Potentials, Visual
;
physiology
;
Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted
4.Efficient coding of natural images.
Acta Physiologica Sinica 2011;63(5):463-471
Efficient coding theory proposes that sensory systems in the brain have been adapted to process natural scenes efficiently over the long history of evolution. Computational modeling the statistical regularities of natural images is therefore beneficial to our understanding of the mechanisms of visual information processing. In this paper, we briefly review the recent progress in using efficient coding approaches to study the encoding of natural images in the visual system.
Animals
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Evoked Potentials, Visual
;
physiology
;
Humans
;
Models, Statistical
;
Photic Stimulation
;
Visual Cortex
;
physiology
;
Visual Perception
;
physiology
5.Establishment of the sweep pattern visual evoked potential system and its application.
Xiao-Peng LI ; Chen ZHANG ; Jun HU ; Jun WU ; Yan-Miao ZHU ; Hai-Sheng LI
Journal of Forensic Medicine 2009;25(2):88-91
OBJECTIVE:
To establish an acuity inspection system with sweep pattern visual evoked potential (SPVEP) so as to provide the evidence for acuity objective inspection.
METHODS:
Based on the domestic sweep pattern visual evoked apparatus, sections of hardware were reformed and a manipulation program possessing false random control software was compiled. The SPVEP acuity for the 78 eyes (10 normal eyes, 10 ametropia eyes, 48 prevalence eyes, 10 false ametropia eyes) was estimated with our acuity objective inspection system, then compared with the E visual acuity of those eyes by statistical procedure.
RESULTS:
There was a close correlation between the SPVEP acuity and E visual acuity for 78 eyes (r2 = 0.946).
CONCLUSION
SPVEP acuity inspection system can be applied to estimate objective acuity.
Evoked Potentials, Visual/physiology*
;
Forensic Medicine/methods*
;
Humans
;
Vision Tests/methods*
;
Visual Acuity/physiology*
6.Comparison of Pattern-pulse and Pattern-reversal Multifocal Visual Evoked Potentials in Normal Individuals.
Rong-ting ZHU ; Xing-ben LIU ; Xiao-ming XU ; Chuan-fei ZHENG
Journal of Forensic Medicine 2016;32(1):35-39
OBJECTIVE:
To compare pattern-pulse multifocal visual evoked potential (PPmfVEP) with pattern-reversal multifocal visual evoked potential (PRmfVEP), and to investigate the symmetry of mfVEP between both eyes in normal individuals.
METHODS:
The multifocal Vision Monitor was used to observe the mfVEP. T-test and ANOVA were used to analyze P1 wave, amplitude and signal noise ratios (SNR) of two mfVEPs.
RESULTS:
The SNR and the P1 amplitude reached the maximum at the central visual field and decreased with the increase of eccentricity, and then decreased slowly. The amplitude of the PPmfVEP was significantly smaller than the PRmfVEP in the central retina, while in the peripheral retina the result was exactly the opposite. SNR and amplitude of the PRmfVEP showed no statistical difference in both eyes (P > 0.05). The variance of the amplitude at the same side of visual field was larger than that at the symmetrical visual quadrant.
CONCLUSION
mfVEP can reflect the visual function in different parts of retina objectively and exactly. PPmfVEP reflect the vision function of the central retina better than PRmfVEP. The stability of PPmfVEP is better than PRmfVEP in the central retina, while the result is opposite in the peripheral retina. The mfVEP is symmetrical in both eyes of the same individual.
Evoked Potentials, Visual/physiology*
;
Humans
;
Neurologic Examination
;
Reference Values
;
Retina
;
Sensitivity and Specificity
;
Visual Fields/physiology*
7.Autoregressive analysis of flash evoked potentials in healthy preterm infants during sleep.
Xiao-Long CHEN ; Xiao-Li PAN ; Shu-Ying MENG
Acta Physiologica Sinica 2002;54(5):446-450
To interpret the flash evoked potential (FVEP) as dynamic high-order responses to natural and experimental stimulation in healthy preterm infants, waveform analysis of FVEP in 36 healthy preterm infants (postconceptional age 28~42 weeks) were performed using an autoregressive analysis. Based on the histogram of damping frequency of different component impulse response waveforms, the waveforms were divided into 4 groups: group I (0 ~ <2 Hz), group II (2 ~ <6.5 Hz), group III (6.5 ~ <12.0 Hz) and group IV (12~25 Hz). The total power, power of component impulse responses (group I~IV), and damping time (group II~IV) changed significantly with increasing postconceptional age (P<0.01 or P<0.05). Identification of an impulse response component with dominant frequency which undergoes a well-identified change with age is considered to be a useful tool for discriminating between normal and abnormal changes in the FVEP with age in healthy preterm infants.
Evoked Potentials, Visual
;
physiology
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Infant, Newborn
;
Infant, Premature
;
physiology
;
Male
;
Reaction Time
;
Sleep
;
physiology
8.Formation of the Looming-evoked Innate Defensive Response during Postnatal Development in Mice.
Shanping CHEN ; Huiying TAN ; Zhijie WANG ; Yu-Ting TSENG ; Xiaotao LI ; Liping WANG
Neuroscience Bulletin 2022;38(7):741-752
Environmental threats often trigger innate defensive responses in mammals. However, the gradual development of functional properties of these responses during the postnatal development stage remains unclear. Here, we report that looming stimulation in mice evoked flight behavior commencing at P14-16 and had fully developed by P20-24. The visual-evoked innate defensive response was not significantly altered by sensory deprivation at an early postnatal stage. Furthermore, the percentages of wide-field and horizontal cells in the superior colliculus were notably elevated at P20-24. Our findings define a developmental time window for the formation of the visual innate defense response during the early postnatal period and provide important insight into the underlying mechanism.
Animals
;
Evoked Potentials, Visual
;
Fear/physiology*
;
Mammals
;
Mice
;
Mice, Inbred C57BL
;
Neurons/physiology*
;
Superior Colliculi/physiology*
9.Synchronization of the activity of gamma oscillation and ERP components.
Mingshi WANG ; Jin LIU ; Qiang ZHU ; Yun CHEN
Journal of Biomedical Engineering 2005;22(5):884-889
In the present study the activity of the gamma oscillation synchronized with the stimuli and ERP is investigated by means of unimodal and bimodal experiments. The multiresolution wavelet algorithm is used for signal extraction and Gabor transform is employed to represent the temporal evolution of the selected frequency components. The results show that the gamma oscillation is strongly phase-locked not only with the exogenous stimuli in the three experiments, but also with the endogenous components of ERPs (N2b, P300). And the ERP and the gamma oscillation induced by the bimodal stimuli show the audio-visual bisensory integration and relationship. In addition, the results from the experiments with the auditory stimuli show that the gamma oscillation may be closely related to the perception of auditory signals.
Adult
;
Algorithms
;
Electroencephalography
;
methods
;
Event-Related Potentials, P300
;
physiology
;
Evoked Potentials, Auditory
;
physiology
;
Evoked Potentials, Visual
;
physiology
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted
10.Contrast Visual Evoked Potentials under Pattern Stimulus in Ocular Trauma.
Meng WANG ; Xiao Ying YU ; Jie Min CHEN ; Rui Jue LIU ; Wen Tao XIA
Journal of Forensic Medicine 2017;33(1):21-24
OBJECTIVES:
To study the characteristic of contrast visual evoked potentials (CVEP) in patients with ocular trauma.
METHODS:
Sixty patients defined as ocular trauma by forensic clinical examination in our center were selected, and split into 0.2-0.3 (Group A), 0.3-0.5 (Group B) and ≥0.5 (Group C) according to the best corrected visual acuity. The variation characteristics of wave amplitude and latency of CVEP under 100%, 25% and 10% contrast were observed and analyzed statistically.
RESULTS:
(1) Under the same contrast, the wave amplitude of P₁₀₀ decreased with the decrease of stimulus perspective. (2) Under the same stimulus perspective, the wave amplitude of P₁₀₀ decreased with the decrease of contrast (P<0.05). (3) Under the contrast of 100% and 25% with the same stimulus perspective (except 100% 7' perspective stimulus), the difference between group A and group B had no statistical significance (P>0.05). Between group A and group C, group B and group C, the wave amplitude of P₁₀₀ gradually increased with the increase of vision (P<0.05). Under the contrast of 10% with 15' stimulus perspective, the wave amplitude of P₁₀₀ increased with the increase of vision (P<0.05). (4) Under the same contrast with the same stimulation perspective, the latency of P₁₀₀ wave shortened with the increase of vision, while the difference had no statistical significance (P>0.05). Under the same stimulus perspective, the latency of P₁₀₀ wave was prolonged with the decrease of contrast (P>0.05).
CONCLUSIONS
CVEP may become one of the possible methods for the evaluation of contrast visual acuity.
Evoked Potentials, Visual/physiology*
;
Eye Injuries/physiopathology*
;
Humans
;
Pattern Recognition, Visual/physiology*
;
Photic Stimulation
;
Vision, Ocular
;
Visual Acuity