Interference suppression techniques for OPM-based MEG: Opportunities and challenges
Robert A Seymour, Nicholas Alexander, Stephanie Mellor, George C, O'Neill, Tim M Tierney, Gareth R Barnes, Eleanor A Maguire

TL;DR
This paper reviews hardware and signal processing methods for suppressing interference in OPM-based MEG, highlighting practical strategies and providing tutorials to aid researchers in handling interference challenges in wearable neuroimaging.
Contribution
It offers a comprehensive overview of interference suppression techniques for OPM-MEG and provides practical tutorials with data and code for implementation.
Findings
Hardware solutions for interference suppression
Signal processing strategies including regression and filtering
Worked-through experiments demonstrating interference suppression pipelines
Abstract
One of the primary technical challenges facing magnetoencephalography (MEG) is that the magnitude of neuromagnetic fields is several orders of magnitude lower than interfering signals. Recently, a new type of sensor has been developed - the optically pumped magnetometer (OPM). These sensors can be placed directly on the scalp and move with the head during participant movement, making them wearable. This opens up a range of exciting experimental and clinical opportunities for OPM-based MEG experiments, including paediatric studies, and the incorporation of naturalistic movements into neuroimaging paradigms. However, OPMs face some unique challenges in terms of interference suppression, especially in situations involving mobile participants, and when OPMs are integrated with electrical equipment required for naturalistic paradigms, such as motion capture systems. Here we briefly review…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAtomic and Subatomic Physics Research · Functional Brain Connectivity Studies · Magnetic and transport properties of perovskites and related materials
