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Original Article

Pattern Component Ratio In Pattern-Reversal Vep: Normative Data And Clinical Applications

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Pages 133-141 | Received 14 Dec 1982, Published online: 07 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

It has been well established that there is a reliable implicit time to the VEP positive component (ca 100 msec) in response to pattern reversal. This has become a valuable test of the status of the visual system. Recent data suggest that activity around 200 msec is another useful measure of the cortical response to pattern alternation. We have carried out a normative study of the relative amplitudes of the two components. Among adults with normal visual acuity activity around 200 msec is directly related to the spatial frequency of the stimulus, peaking markedly in amplitude at a narrow range of spatial frequencies. This is in sharp contrast to the earlier component, which does not exhibit such sensitive size differentiation. Recently we have used the ratio between the late and early component amplitudes as a quantitative indicator of the efficiency of higher-level processing of pattern information. We present our normative data and illustrate the effects of decreased visual responses not related to known peripheral optical problems. The results of this work are also interpreted as showing basic characteristics of information processing in the visual system, in that higher spatial frequencies are processed by a continuum of rather sharply tuned cortical processes, with the higher spatial frequencies being processed later in time.

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