Determining sensor geometry and gain in a wearable MEG system
Ryan M. Hill, Gonzalo Reina Rivero, Ashley J. Tyler, Holly Schofield,, Cody Doyle, James Osborne, David Bobela, Lukas Rier, Joseph Gibson, Zoe, Tanner, Elena Boto, Richard Bowtell, Matthew J. Brookes, Vishal Shah and, Niall Holmes

TL;DR
This paper introduces two calibration methods for wearable MEG systems using optically pumped magnetometers, improving sensor localization and orientation accuracy, which enhances data quality and practical usability.
Contribution
It presents two novel calibration techniques for OPM-based MEG systems, enabling accurate sensor placement and gain calibration in flexible, real-world scenarios.
Findings
Both methods accurately calibrate sensor locations within 2 mm.
Calibrations improve signal-to-noise ratio in human MEG data.
The methods are practical and integrate easily into existing setups.
Abstract
Optically pumped magnetometers (OPMs) are compact and lightweight sensors that can measure magnetic fields generated by current flow in neuronal assemblies in the brain. Such sensors enable construction of magnetoencephalography (MEG) instrumentation, with significant advantages over conventional MEG devices including adaptability to head size, enhanced movement tolerance, lower complexity and improved data quality. However, realising the potential of OPMs depends on our ability to perform system calibration, which means finding sensor locations, orientations, and the relationship between the sensor output and magnetic field (termed sensor gain). Such calibration is complex in OPMMEG since, for example, OPM placement can change from subject to subject (unlike in conventional MEG where sensor locations or orientations are fixed). Here, we present two methods for calibration, both based…
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Taxonomy
TopicsErgonomics and Musculoskeletal Disorders
