TY - BOOK AU - Nermin Nabil Fayed AU - Abla Abdelrahman Ali , AU - Alaa Mohamed Shehab , AU - Sherien Salah Eldeen Ghaleb , TI - Using brain fingerprinting in the detection of concealed information in Egyptians / PY - 2017/// CY - Cairo : PB - Nermin Nabil Fayed , KW - Brain fingerprinting KW - Electroencephalography EEG KW - P300 wave N1 - Thesis (Ph.D.) - Cairo University - Faculty of Medicine - Department of Forensic Medicine Toxicology; Issued also as CD N2 - Background: Brain fingerprinting is a forensic science technique that uses electroencephalography (EEG) to determine whether specific information is stored in a subject{u2019}s brain. It can be done by measuring electrical brainwave responses to pictures that are presented on a computer screen; P300 wave is a specific Event-related potentials (ERP) component that has the potential for detecting concealed information in the brain. Objectives: this work aimed to evaluate the appearance of P300 wave in response to relevant visual stimuli and its absence to irrelevant ones and to evaluate the latency and amplitude of p300 wave in response to well-known persons and places. Methods: A cross sectional prospective study carried out on 225 normal individuals at clinical Neurophysiology unit, Faculty of medicine, Cairo University hospitals they comprised both sexes aged from 18-70 years old; participants were divided into 3 groups. An endogenous ERP;P300 wave was seen evoked in response to rare, presented, recognized, meaningful stimulus, the Peak amplitude was calculated and peak latency was measured from the time of stimulus onset. Results: A photo of a person or place known to the test subject elicited a well-marked P300 response, while that of an unknown personality or place didn{u2019}t generate noticeable response.P300 wave latency and amplitude was recorded. There was a significant association between P300 amplitude and latency with age and educational level UR - http://172.23.153.220/th.pdf ER -