Patients with photosensitive epilepsy were asked to view normally functioning 625-line televisions while the EEG was monitored. In the first of two studies paroxysmal EEG activity was reliably induced by television at a viewing distance related to a patient's sensitivity to intermittent photic stimulation (IPS); patients who were sensitive to diffuse IPS at 50 Hz were sensitive to the television at greater viewing distances than those who were not. No such relationship was obtained with patterned IPS. On the other hand, patterned IPS was generally more epileptogenic than diffuse IPS with the same luminance. In the second study, where the angular subtense of the television screen and the subtense of its lines were manipulated independently, the convulsive response was found to be a function of both factors, the relative contribution of each depending on the viewing distance at which the patient was sensitive. For patients sensitive at normal viewing distances, where 50 Hz diffuse flicker appeared to be responsible for the induction of paroxysmal activity, the probability with which paroxysmal activity was induced was closely related to the subtense of the screen. For patients sensitive only at closer viewing distances the probability was influenced not by the subtense of the screen but by the subtense of its lines, suggesting that the paroxysmal activity was induced by the 25 Hz pattern alternation produced by the scan. A television with a small screen was considerably less epileptogenic than one with a large screen for all patients, presumably due to the reduced contribution of both diffuse flicker and pattern alternation.
[1]
F. W. Campbell,et al.
The Transmission of Spatial Information Through the Visual System
,
1973
.
[2]
E. Lettich,et al.
Pattern‐Sensitive Epilepsy
,
1970,
Epilepsia.
[3]
C. D. Binnie,et al.
Electroencephalographic signs employed in the location of ruptured intracranial arterial aneurysms.
,
1970,
Electroencephalography and clinical neurophysiology.
[4]
J. Engel.
Selective photoconvulsive responses to intermittent diffuse and patterned photic stimulation.
,
1974,
Electroencephalography and clinical neurophysiology.
[5]
E. Lettich,et al.
Pattern‐Sensitive Epilepsy
,
1970,
Epilepsia.
[6]
A. T. Smith,et al.
Television epilepsy and pattern sensitivity.
,
1977
.
[7]
N. Drasdo,et al.
The effect of geometric patterns combined with intermittent photic stimulation in photosensitive epilepsy.
,
1972,
Electroencephalography and clinical neurophysiology.
[8]
M. Charlton,et al.
TELEVISION AND EPILEPSY.
,
1964,
Archives of neurology.
[9]
A. Wilkins,et al.
Neurophysiological aspects of pattern-sensitive epilepsy.
,
1979,
Brain : a journal of neurology.