Abstract
Background: Electroencephalography (EEG) systems based on textile electrodes are increasingly being developed to address the need for more wearable sensor systems for brain function monitoring. Blink-related oscillations (BROs) are a new measure of brain function that corresponds to brainwave responses occurring after spontaneous blinking, and indexes neural processes as the brain evaluates new visual information appearing after eye re-opening. Prior studies have reported BRO utility as both a clinical and non-clinical biomarker of cognition, but no study has demonstrated BRO measurement using textile-based EEG devices that facilitate user comfort for real-world applications. Methods: We investigated BRO measurement using a four-channel EEG system with textile electrodes by extracting BRO responses using existing, publicly available EEG data (n = 9). We compared BRO effects derived from textile-based electrodes with those from standard dry Ag/Ag-Cl electrodes collected at the same locations (i.e., Fp1, Fp2, F7, F8) and using the same EEG amplifier. Results: Results showed that BRO effects measured using textile electrodes exhibited similar features in both time and frequency domains compared to dry Ag/Ag-Cl electrodes. Data from both technologies also showed similar performance in artifact removal and signal capture. Conclusions: These findings provide the first demonstration of successful BRO signal capture using four-channel EEG with textile electrodes, providing compelling evidence toward the development of a comfortable and user-friendly EEG technology that uses the simple activity of blinking for objective brain function assessment in a variety of settings.