Conference Proceeding
Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Conference Proceeding (1620) (remove)
Language
- English (1146)
- German (472)
- Multiple languages (1)
- Spanish (1)
Keywords
- Biosensor (25)
- Blitzschutz (15)
- CAD (11)
- Finite-Elemente-Methode (11)
- civil engineering (11)
- Bauingenieurwesen (10)
- Lightning protection (9)
- Einspielen <Werkstoff> (6)
- Telekommunikationsmarkt (6)
- shakedown analysis (6)
- Enterprise Architecture (5)
- Gamification (5)
- Graduiertentagung (5)
- Leadership (5)
- Clusterion (4)
- Energy storage (4)
- Führung (4)
- Kanalisation (4)
- Limit analysis (4)
- Natural language processing (4)
Institute
- Fachbereich Elektrotechnik und Informationstechnik (296)
- Fachbereich Energietechnik (259)
- Fachbereich Medizintechnik und Technomathematik (239)
- Fachbereich Maschinenbau und Mechatronik (207)
- Fachbereich Luft- und Raumfahrttechnik (203)
- Solar-Institut Jülich (167)
- IfB - Institut für Bioengineering (151)
- Fachbereich Bauingenieurwesen (137)
- Fachbereich Wirtschaftswissenschaften (68)
- ECSM European Center for Sustainable Mobility (57)
- INB - Institut für Nano- und Biotechnologien (52)
- MASKOR Institut für Mobile Autonome Systeme und Kognitive Robotik (48)
- Fachbereich Chemie und Biotechnologie (34)
- Nowum-Energy (22)
- Kommission für Forschung und Entwicklung (16)
- Fachbereich Architektur (13)
- ZHQ - Bereich Hochschuldidaktik und Evaluation (10)
- FH Aachen (7)
- Fachbereich Gestaltung (4)
- IaAM - Institut für angewandte Automation und Mechatronik (3)
Conventional EEG devices cannot be used in everyday life and
hence, past decade research has been focused on Ear-EEG for mobile,
at-home monitoring for various applications ranging from
emotion detection to sleep monitoring. As the area available for
electrode contact in the ear is limited, the electrode size and location
play a vital role for an Ear-EEG system. In this investigation, we
present a quantitative study of ear-electrodes with two electrode
sizes at different locations in a wet and dry configuration. Electrode
impedance scales inversely with size and ranges from 450 kΩ to
1.29 MΩ for dry and from 22 kΩ to 42 kΩ for wet contact at 10 Hz.
For any size, the location in the ear canal with the lowest impedance
is ELE (Left Ear Superior), presumably due to increased contact
pressure caused by the outer-ear anatomy. The results can be used
to optimize signal pickup and SNR for specific applications. We
demonstrate this by recording sleep spindles during sleep onset
with high quality (5.27 μVrms).