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McEvoy, L.K., Smith, M.E., & Gevins, A. (2000). Test-retest reliability of task-related EEG. Clinical Neurophysiology, 1, 457-463.

ABSTRACT

Objective: Task-related EEG is sensitive to changes in cognitive state produced by increased task difficulty and by transient impairment. If task-related EEG has high test-retest reliability, it could be used as part of a clinical test to assess changes in cognitive function. The aim of this study was to determine the reliability of the EEG recorded during the performance of a working memory (WM) task and a psychomotor vigilance task (PVT). Design and Methods. EEG was recorded while subjects rested quietly and while they performed the tasks. Within session (test-retest interval of ~1 hour) and between session (test-retest interval of ~7 days) reliability was calculated for four EEG components: frontal midline theta at Fz, posterior theta at Pz, and slow and fast alpha at Pz. Results. Task-related EEG was highly reliable within and between sessions ( r > 0.9 for all components in WM task, and r > 0.8 for all components in the PVT). Resting EEG also showed high reliability, although the magnitude of the correlation was somewhat smaller than that of the task-related EEG (r > 0.7 for all four components). Conclusions. These results suggest that under appropriate conditions, task-related EEG has sufficient retest reliability for use in assessing clinical changes in cognitive status.

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