RT Journal Article T1 On the extraction of purely motor EEG neural correlates during an upper limb visuomotor task A1 Bibián, Carlos A1 Irastorza-Landa, Nerea A1 Schönauer, Monika A1 Birbaumer, Niels A1 López-Larraz, Eduardo A1 Ramos-Murguialday, Ander AB Deciphering and analyzing the neural correlates of different movements from the same limb using electroencephalography (EEG) would represent a notable breakthrough in the field of sensorimotor neurophysiology. Functional movements involve concurrent posture co-ordination and head and eye movements, which create electrical activity that affects EEG recordings. In this paper, we revisit the identification of brain signatures of different reaching movements using EEG and present, test, and validate a protocol to separate the effect of head and eye movements from a reaching task-related visuomotor brain activity. Ten healthy participants performed reaching movements under two different conditions: avoiding head and eye movements and moving with no constrains. Reaching movements can be identified from EEG with unconstrained eye and head movement, whereas the discriminability of the signals drops to chance level otherwise. These results show that neural patterns associated with different arm movements could only be extracted from EEG if the eye and head movements occurred concurrently with the task, polluting the recordings. Although these findings do not imply that brain correlates of reaching directions cannot be identified from EEG, they show the consequences that ignoring these events can have in any EEG study that includes a visuomotor task. SN 1047-3211 YR 2022 FD 2022-10-01 LK https://hdl.handle.net/11556/4153 UL https://hdl.handle.net/11556/4153 LA eng NO Bibián , C , Irastorza-Landa , N , Schönauer , M , Birbaumer , N , López-Larraz , E & Ramos-Murguialday , A 2022 , ' On the extraction of purely motor EEG neural correlates during an upper limb visuomotor task ' , Cerebral Cortex , vol. 32 , no. 19 , pp. 4243-4254 . https://doi.org/10.1093/cercor/bhab479 NO Publisher Copyright: © 2021 The Author(s). Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. DS TECNALIA Publications RD 26 jul 2024