Recording brain activities in unshielded Earth’s field with optically pumped atomic magnetometers

  • Rui Zhang
  • , Wei Xiao
  • , Yudong Ding
  • , Yulong Feng
  • , Xiang Peng
  • , Liang Shen
  • , Chenxi Sun
  • , Teng Wu*
  • , Yulong Wu
  • , Yucheng Yang
  • , Zhaoyu Zheng
  • , Xiangzhi Zhang
  • , Jingbiao Chen
  • , Hong Guo
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

170 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Understanding the relationship between brain activity and specific mental function is important for medical diagnosis of brain symptoms, such as epilepsy. Magnetoencephalography (MEG), which uses an array of high-sensitivity magnetometers to record magnetic field signals generated from neural currents occurring naturally in the brain, is a noninvasive method for locating the brain activities. The MEG is normally performed in a magnetically shielded room. Here, we introduce an unshielded MEG system based on optically pumped atomic magnetometers. We build an atomic magnetic gradiometer, together with feedback methods, to reduce the environment magnetic field noise. We successfully observe the alpha rhythm signals related to closed eyes and clear auditory evoked field signals in unshielded Earth’s field. Combined with improvements in the miniaturization of the atomic magnetometer, our method is promising to realize a practical wearable and movable unshielded MEG system and bring new insights into medical diagnosis of brain symptoms.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbereaba8792
JournalScience advances
Volume6
Issue number24
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jun 2020
Externally publishedYes

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