Are VEP correlated fast optical signals detectable in the human adult by non-invasive nearinfrared spectroscopy (NIRS)?
The potential of near infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) to detect vascular changes in cerebral cortical tissue elicited by functional stimulation has been established (1). The vascular response is considered the result of neuronal activity in the investigated area and forms the basis of imaging techniques such as BOLD-contrast fMRI and PET. In the animal optical methods have been shown to detect optical changes in the illuminated tissue which exactly follow the time course of electrical potential changes, thus optical techniques can potentially assess both the ‘fast’ neuronal and the ‘slow’ vascular response. Lately a group of investigators has reported data showing that the ‘fast optical signal’ is detectable in the adult human in response to a visual stimulus (“optical VEP” termed EROS, i.e. event related optical signal). We failed to reproduce these results, with an almost identical instrumentation and experimental protocol. The negative result is reported in this paper. To check the exp