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From its discovery in 1929 by Hans Berger until the late 1960s,
when sensory visual and auditory evoked potentials were dis covered
and became popular, the EEG was the most important method of
neurophysiological examination. W-ith the advent of computer
technology in the 1980s, it became possible to plot the potential
fields of the EEG onto models of the scalp. This plot ting of
information as neuroimages followed the structural and functional
techniques of Cf, MRI, PET and SPECf. The success of this method,
which began in the early 1980s, has led to the brain mapping of
EEGs and EPs being increasingly used for di agnosistic purposes in
neurology, psychiatry and psychopharma cology. The pioneers of this
method believed in it and were commit ted to its success. However,
many traditionalists felt that it gave no new information and so
regarded the method with scepticism. Some found both the coloured
maps and the mapping technique misleading, which led to unnecessary
conflict between mappers and their chromophobic oponents. Emotions
have run so high that some professional bodies have justifiably
adopted guidelines and warned of the misuse of the method."
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