Uniti 211115041435
Uniti 211115041435
Uniti 211115041435
Characterization of
Biomedical
Signals
Organ
Level
System
Organizational
Level
Level
Nature of
Biomedical Signals
Living organisms are made of many systems – e.g. human body:
Nervous, cardiovascular, gastrointestinal, endocrine, respiratory, etc.
Each system is made of subsystems (organs, tissues, etc.) that are responsible for certain
physiological processes
All biological signals of electrical origin are made up from integration of many
action potentials
• At resting state, the cell membrane is permeable to K+ and Cl-, but not to Na+
• Lots of Na+ trapped outside make the intracellular region electrically more negative,
with a resting membrane potential of -60 ~-80 mV
• When the cell is disturbed, ion channels across the membrane open up and allow an
influx of Na+ : depolarization inside of the cell becomes more positive: +20mV
• However, the channels close soon after, forcing the membrane potential back to its
resting stage: repolarization
• The change in membrane potential is the AP, which itself then stimulates the
neighboring cell, and starts the transmission of the APs
Computer aided diagnosis
Objective of biomedical signal
analysis
• Information gathering - measurement of phenomena to interpret a system.
• Amplitude: 1-10 mV
• Bandwidth: 20-3000 Hz
1. Atrial
depolarization
Electrocardiogram - ECG
ECG
• Amplitude: 1-5 mV
• Bandwidth: 0.05-100 Hz
• Typical applications:
– Diagnosis of ischemia
– Arrhythmia
– Conduction defects
The Electroencephalogram
EEG
• Measures the brain’s electric activity from the scalp
• Amplitude:0.001-0.01 Mv
• Bandwidth:0.5-40 Hz
• Errors:
– Thermal RF noise
– 50/60 Hz power lines
– Blink artifacts and similar
• Typical applications:
– Sleep studies
– Seizure detection
– Cortical mapping
EEG: Electrode Recording
System
• EEG recording is
done using a
standard lead
system called 10-
20 system
10-20 International
Electrode Placement
The Electrooculogram
EOG
The EOG measures
the resting potential of
the retina. Unlike
ERG it is not recorded
in response to a
stimulus.
• Amplitude: 0.01-0.1 mV
• Bandwidth: DC-10 Hz
• Primary sources of error include skin
potential and motion
Muscle signal
interference
Placement
Electromagnetic
interference
Shielding
PHYSIOLOGICAL INTERFERENCE