kpnl:biopac:scr
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Table of Contents
Electrodermal Activity
There are several aspects of the EDA that one can measure:
- SC = Skin conductance. Measured in microsiemens or micromhos (the reciprocal of resistance, ohm)
- SCL = tonic changes in SC
- note: we will generally not focus on SCL for a number of reasons. These include the fact that SCL will drift over time due to both physiological (SCRs can raise SCL) and non-physiological (polarization of electrodes in DC recording) factors.
- SCR = phasic changes in SC
- NS-SCR = SCRs that occur without any identifiable eliciting stimulus
- ER-SCR = SCR that is evoked by a specific eliciting stimulus
Moreover, there are several ways to evaluate these responses. With regard to SCRs, one can
- evaluate the peak amplitude of the SCR
- evaluate the rise-time of the SCR
- evaluate the recovery time of the SCR
- note: generally this is measured to 67% or 50% recovery because after an SCR there will likely be an increase in SCL. That is, the response will not completely recover to pre-SCR baseline.
- evaluate the frequency of NS-SCRs within a given epoch
- evaluate the rate of SCR habituation
Recording Electrodermal Responses
Useful links
Initial Setup
Electrode Setup
- Connect two LEAD110A leads into the EDA100C
- Plug one lead into the
Vin+
port and the other into theVin-
port
- Use electrode prep swab to clean the index and middle fingers of the participant's non-dominant hand
- Remove two EL507 electrodes.
- Put extra GEL101 on them
- You must use the specific SCR GEL101. Other conductive gels (e.g. the EEG gel) are not appropriate.
- Place them on the middle phalanx of the participant's index and middle fingers. Refer to the image below
- Attach the pinch connector of one LEAD110A to the EL507 electrode on the middle finger, and the other to the EL507 electrode on the pointer finger.
kpnl/biopac/scr.1445951919.txt.gz · Last modified: 2015/10/27 08:18 by admin