Skip to main content
The Institution of Engineering and Technology iet.tv
Site name
  • Videos
  • Channels
  • Events
  • Series

Access and Account

Access your personal account

Log in to see your favourites, lists and progress.

IET Login

Access via institution

Not currently connected to any institutions

Connect via

This video isn’t available to you right now

Login to check your access and watch the full session

Login
  1. Videos
  2. Video

The relationship between electrovestibulography and Parkinson's disease

  • WhatsApp
  • Facebook
  • Email
  • LinkedIn
  • Bluesky
CPD This content can contribute towards your Continuing Professional Development (CPD) as part of the IET's CPD Monitoring scheme.
Conference
  • Session
  • Monday, 17 July 2006
  • 00:17 - 00:17
  • Duration: 16 mins
  • Publication date: 17 Jul 2006
  • Location: IETTV_Room, IETTV_Venue, Glasgow, United Kingdom
  • Part of event 3rd International Conference MEDSIP 2006 Advances in Medical, Signal and Information Processing

About the session

Parkinson's disease is a neurodegenerative disorder which results from the loss of dopaminergic neurons in parts of the basal ganglia of the brain. One of the most debilitating symptoms of this disease is poor balance. The vestibular system is responsible for reporting on the position and movement of the head, in order to maintain the body's balance. Pathways between the basal ganglia and the vestibular nuclei are known to exist. In this project, electrovestibulography (EvestG), a technique used to measure neuronal activity of the vestibular apparatus and nuclei, has been used as a window to the function of the basal ganglia of the brain. We hypothesise that a novel wavelet based signal processing technique, a neural event extraction routine, can be used to extract diagnostically meaningful biomarkers from EVestG recordings obtained from Parkinson's patients. As a preliminary study, recordings were carried out on ten healthy subjects and five who were suffering from Parkinson's disease. Vestibular neural events were detected and plotted using the neural event extraction routine. Biomarkers from these waveforms seem to show consistent differences between healthy subjects and those suffering from Parkinson's disease

Channels

Communications

Communications

Speaker

  • MS

    Mehrnaz Shoushtarian

    Monash University, Diagnostic & Neurosignal Process. Res. Lab.

The Institution of Engineering and Technology iet.tv

Address: Futures Place, Kings Way, Stevenage, SG1 2UA

Telephone: +44 (0)33 049 9123

Email:  iet.tv@theiet.org

© 2026 The Institution of Engineering and Technology.

The Institution of Engineering and Technology is registered as a Charity in England & Wales (no 211014) and Scotland (no SC038698). Futures Place, Kings Way, Stevenage, Hertfordshire, SG1 2UA, United Kingdom

  • LinkedIn
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
Privacy statement Cookie Preferences Accessibility About us theiet.org Help

Powered by Cadmore Media

Embed Code

<script type="text/javascript" src="https://play.cadmore.media/js/EMBED.js"></script> <div class="cmpl_iframe_div"> <iframe src="https://play.cadmore.media/Player/ec98975b-3f4e-423e-867f-36ca5f1bc547" scrolling="no" allowtransparency="true" allowautoplay="true" frameborder="0" allow="encrypted-media;autoplay;fullscreen" class="cmpl_iframe" allowfullscreen="" style="overflow: hidden;border: 0px; margin: 0px; height: 100%; width:100%;"></iframe> </div>

Are you sure you want to reset your password?

If so, you will be redirected to the Authentication Service

Title

Prompt