Magnetoencephalography (MEG) Lab

CHBH Magnetoencephalography (MEG) Lab Lead:
Dr Hyojin Park
MEG Lab Support Officer: 
Jonathan Winter

The magnetoencephalography (MEG) laboratory houses a Neuromag TRIUX system, installed in 2018. MEG allows for continuous recordings of ongoing brain activity with millisecond time resolution. By using advanced analysis tools it is furthermore possible to identify where in the brain the measured electrophysiology activity is generated.

The TRIUX system has 306 sensors distributed over the head: 204 planar gradiometers and 102 magnetometers (noise-resilient ARMOR sensors). The MEG system is placed in a shielded room (2 layers of mu-metal and 1 layer of aluminium).  The system allows for concurrent electroencephalography (EEG) recordings from 64 electrodes as well as bipolar sensors. The system also allows for continuous monitoring of the head position. A closed-loop He recycler fully eliminates refills.

The peripherals of the MEG system include:

  • ProPixx visual projector (1440 Hz refresh rate)
  • SOUNDPixx auditory stimulation
  • EyeLink 1000 Plus fast eye-tracker
  • Digitimer DS7A stimulator
  • NAtA button boxes
  • EASYCAP EEG caps (64 channels)
  • Stimulus delivery computer (Psychtoolbox, PsychoPy, ePRIME and Presentation) 

For data analysis we primarily rely on the FieldTrip toolbox and MNE Python. We have developed a local data analysis pipeline.

How can researchers access the equipment within this lab?
To gain access to the MEG there are procedures for training, ethics and project proposals. For the procedures please see the CHBH Operating Procedures and Local Rules.

What research data is produced and what can we understand from this?
The MEG system records ongoing brain activity from humans subjects performing cognitive tasks. The tasks we use include attention, memory, sleep and language comprehension. This allows for characterising brain dynamics – such as neuronal oscillations – associated with a given cognitive function. MEG records the brain activity with millisecond time-resolution and source modelling approaches allow for localising where in the brain the activity is activated. As such, MEG is an excellent tool for studying the networks engaged in the working brain. Researchers at the CHBH have strong expertise investigating the role of neuronal oscillations.

How is this lab contributing to the CHBH values and principles?
The MEG system is used for conducting fundamental research on cognition as well as to investigate brain dynamics associated with neurological and psychiatric disorders. The data from the MEG system are complementary to data from other techniques housed within the CHBH. Therefore, we are integrating the MEG research with other techniques, such as; brain stimulation, functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and measures of structural connectivity. The research conducted on the MEG system is done in the spirit of open science and we strive to co-register new studies and make our approaches and data freely available.

For further information, please contact the CHBH MEG Lab Lead - Dr Hyojin Park or CHBH MEG Lab Support Officer Jonathan Winter.

External researchers/collaborators
If you are an external researcher and would like to use CHBH facilities, please identify a suitable collaborator from the Principal Investigator lists located on our CHBH Research Theme pages, and contact them directly with your proposal. They will then review the scope of the proposal, costings, and modality availability, and advise on a potential collaboration.


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CHBH Co-Director Professor Ole Jensen describes his research into the influence of brain oscillations, as can be measured using the latest magnetoencephalography (MEG) scanner.