In Artinis NIRS blog, you will find the latest trends in (f)NIRS, NIRS studies and applications, tutor from the leaders of near infrared spectroscopy, not to mention detailed insights and tips and tricks for your research!

Publication overview 2024 - Studies measuring brain and muscle oxygenation simultaneously using our devices
General, PortaLite, PortaMon, Brite, OxyMon Sophie Apprich General, PortaLite, PortaMon, Brite, OxyMon Sophie Apprich

Publication overview 2024 - Studies measuring brain and muscle oxygenation simultaneously using our devices

NIRS can be used to measure brain and muscle oxygenation at the same time to get a complete picture on oxygen status in the body. We are happy that in 2024 an increased number of studies using NIRS on brain and muscle simultaneously in various application fields was released. Read this blogpost to learn more about application areas of NIRS to assess cerebral and muscular oxygenation, and highlighted publications of last year per category.

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Using fNIRS to explore neurocognitive aging: An interview with Dr. Claudia Gonzalez
Brite Artinis Medical Systems Brite Artinis Medical Systems

Using fNIRS to explore neurocognitive aging: An interview with Dr. Claudia Gonzalez

Neurocognitive aging explores how aging affects cognitive functions like memory, attention, and problem-solving, which vary widely across individuals. Dr. Claudia Gonzalez, PI of the ABC Lab, leads research focused on understanding the neural and cognitive changes in aging adults. In this interview, Dr. Gonzalez shares her insights and discusses how fNIRS plays a role in advancing our understanding of how aging influences brain function and behavior.

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Beyond the Brain: Unveiling the Mind-Muscle Connection with Simultaneous NIRS
PortaLite, Brite, PortaMon, Sports science, Software Sophie Apprich PortaLite, Brite, PortaMon, Sports science, Software Sophie Apprich

Beyond the Brain: Unveiling the Mind-Muscle Connection with Simultaneous NIRS

NIRS can be applied on any tissue enabling to measure brain and muscle oxygenation simultaneously. Read this blogpost to learn more about application areas employing NIRS on muscle and brain at the same time, recently published literature and solutions Artinis offers to make this possible.

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Publication overview 2023: Using our (f)NIRS devices to measure in the brain
General, Brite, PortaLite, Multimodality Sophie Apprich General, Brite, PortaLite, Multimodality Sophie Apprich

Publication overview 2023: Using our (f)NIRS devices to measure in the brain

We are proud that in 2023 an increasing number of publications using our (f)NIRS devices to measure brain activity could be found. In this blogpost, we list application areas with papers released last year utilizing our devices. We also highlight and summarize interesting publications per application category.

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How Artinis fNIRS systems are ideal for monitoring the brain of sensitive participants
General, Brite, PortaLite, OctaMon, OxyMon Sophie Apprich General, Brite, PortaLite, OctaMon, OxyMon Sophie Apprich

How Artinis fNIRS systems are ideal for monitoring the brain of sensitive participants

Functional Near-Infrared Spectroscopy is a neuroimaging modality measuring brain activity, that offers various advantages, such as easy usability and non-invasiveness. Thus, it can perfectly be applied to sensitive subjects, such as infants, toddlers, and the elderly. Read in this blog post, what makes fNIRS a suitable technology to measure neural activity in sensitive subjects, and how it is currently used in this population.

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Multimodal fNIRS-EEG measurements — Integration on the head
Brite, OctaMon, OxyMon, Multimodality Sophie Apprich Brite, OctaMon, OxyMon, Multimodality Sophie Apprich

Multimodal fNIRS-EEG measurements — Integration on the head

When simultaneously measuring fNIRS and EEG, placement of both devices should ideally ensure proper coverage of the desired measurement location, minimize interference and take into account (technical) characteristics and basic of both techniques. Read this blog post to learn more about relevance of these points and further recommendations for integrating fNIRS and EEG on one head.  

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Publication Overview with our NIRS devices in 2022 – Brain
General, Brite, OctaMon, OxyMon, PortaLite, Multimodality Sophie Apprich General, Brite, OctaMon, OxyMon, PortaLite, Multimodality Sophie Apprich

Publication Overview with our NIRS devices in 2022 – Brain

We are proud that several papers using our (f)NIRS devices to measure brain activation from different cortical areas and in various application fields were published in 2022. Read this blogpost to get an overview of application areas (f)NIRS can be used in, and which devices can be applied. Also, find highlighted publications per category that were performed with our devices in 2022.

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The use of Inertial Measurement Unit (IMU) to detect motion artifacts
Brite, PortaLite, General, NIRS data analysis Sophie Apprich Brite, PortaLite, General, NIRS data analysis Sophie Apprich

The use of Inertial Measurement Unit (IMU) to detect motion artifacts

Due to its portability, NIRS and fNIRS devices are often used to measure brain and muscle activity during studies that involve movement. To detect motion artifacts that might occur during these experiments, some of our devices, for instance, Brite and PortaLite MKII, incorporate an inertial measurement unit (IMU). Read this blog post, to learn more about the technology behind IMU and how it is used to detect motion artifacts.

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Measuring brain activity during playing a competitive checker game – a fNIRS hyperscanning mini study
General, Brite Sophie Apprich General, Brite Sophie Apprich

Measuring brain activity during playing a competitive checker game – a fNIRS hyperscanning mini study

In hyperscanning, brain activity and connectivity of multiple subjects are measured simultaneously during social interaction, for instance in competitive situations. fNIRS is often used as neuroimaging technology for hyperscanning in cognitive studies due to its portability and relative insensitivity to movement artifacts. In an internal mini-study, we tested the use of Brite Frontal to perform hyperscanning while participants played a competitive game of checker.

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