New Cere­nion patent improves reli­a­bil­i­ty of EEG analy­sis in chal­leng­ing clin­i­cal con­di­tions

Cere­nion has been grant­ed a new patent for an advanced method that improves the reli­a­bil­i­ty of EEG analy­sis by recon­struct­ing miss­ing or cor­rupt­ed brain sig­nal data using intel­li­gent sur­ro­gate data tech­niques.

The patent­ed tech­nol­o­gy enables quan­ti­ta­tive EEG (qEEG) analy­sis to remain robust even when parts of the EEG sig­nal are lost dur­ing mea­sure­ment, trans­mis­sion, or stor­age. By dynam­i­cal­ly gen­er­at­ing replace­ment sig­nal seg­ments that pre­serve key char­ac­ter­is­tics of the orig­i­nal EEG data, the method helps main­tain the sta­bil­i­ty and qual­i­ty of neu­ro­phys­i­o­log­i­cal analy­sis in real-world clin­i­cal envi­ron­ments.

Reli­able EEG mon­i­tor­ing is crit­i­cal in inten­sive care and oth­er demand­ing clin­i­cal set­tings, where sig­nal dis­tur­bances and incom­plete record­ings can occur due to patient move­ment, tech­ni­cal inter­rup­tions, or chal­leng­ing mon­i­tor­ing con­di­tions. Cerenion’s patent­ed approach is designed to sup­port more depend­able brain mon­i­tor­ing despite these prac­ti­cal lim­i­ta­tions.

Reli­able EEG inter­pre­ta­tion depends heav­i­ly on sig­nal qual­i­ty, but clin­i­cal envi­ron­ments are rarely per­fect,” says Eero Väyry­nen, CTO and co-founder of Cere­nion. “This patent­ed tech­nol­o­gy helps pre­serve ana­lyt­i­cal reli­a­bil­i­ty even when record­ings are incom­plete, sup­port­ing more depend­able neu­ro-mon­i­tor­ing for crit­i­cal­ly ill patients.”

The inven­tion was devel­oped by Cerenion’s mul­ti­dis­ci­pli­nary research team spe­cial­iz­ing in sig­nal pro­cess­ing and AI-assist­ed crit­i­cal care mon­i­tor­ing.

The new­ly grant­ed patent rep­re­sents anoth­er impor­tant mile­stone in Cerenion’s mis­sion to make EEG in acute health­care eas­i­er and more acces­si­ble than ever before. It strength­ens the company’s grow­ing intel­lec­tu­al prop­er­ty port­fo­lio and rein­forces its com­mit­ment to enable the best pos­si­ble care for all crit­i­cal­ly ill patients.

Source (image and text): Cere­nion