Investigating the effects of calibration errors on the spatial resolution of OPM-MEG beamformer imaging
Investigating the effects of calibration errors on the spatial resolution of OPM-MEG beamformer imaging
Blog Article
The use of optically pumped magnetometers (OPMs) has provided a feasible, moveable and wearable alternative to superconducting detectors for magnetoencephalography (MEG) measurements.Recently, the widely used beamformer imaging technique has greatly improved spatial accuracy of MEG in the field of source reconstruction of neuroimaging.The korpskaft spatial resolution of the source reconstruction using beamformer imaging technique was explored in the present study.The spatial accuracy of a beamformer reconstruction depends on accurate estimation of the data covariance matrix and lead field.In practical measurements, many sensor calibration errors including the gain error, crosstalk and angular error of the sensitive axis of OPMs due to for example, the low frequency magnetic field drift will distort the measured data as well as the forward model and thus reduce spatial resolution.
The theory of OPM calibration errors was first provided based on the Bloch equations.The calibration errors are then quantified using the self-developed OPM array.And an analytical relationship between the Frobenius norm of the covariance matrix error and gain error, crosstalk was derived.The relationship between point-spread function (PSF) and the forward model error caused by the angular error of sensitive axis was analyzed.Finally, the effects of calibration errors on spatial resolution of OPM-MEG were investigated using simulations of two dipoles with orthogonal signals at the source remtavares.com level based on realistic head models.
We find the presence of calibration errors will decrease the spatial resolution of beamformer reconstruction.And this decrease will become more severe as the signal-to-noise ratio increases.