HIGHLIGHTS
- who: Bju00f6rn Holtze from the Department of Psychology, University of Oldenburg, Oldenburg, Germany, Neurophysiology have published the paper: Ear-EEG Measures of Auditory Attention to Continuous Speech, in the Journal: (JOURNAL)
- what: The authors investigate the potential of combining these two developments to eventually measure attentional processes unobtrusively. The authors used the cEEGrid as it provides larger inter-electrode distances compared to in-ear EEG, leading to an increase in the measured EEG amplitudes (Bleichner and Debener, 2017) and better sensitivity to distant contributions (Meiser et_al, 2020). To keep the equal volume aspect constant across . . .
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