Halford, Jonathan J.Sabau, DragosDrislane, Frank W.Tsuchida, Tammy N.Sinha, Saurabh R.2017-03-222017-03-222016-08Halford, J. J., Sabau, D., Drislane, F. W., Tsuchida, T. N., & Sinha, S. R. (2016). American Clinical Neurophysiology Society Guideline 4: Recording Clinical EEG on Digital Media. Journal of Clinical Neurophysiology: Official Publication of the American Electroencephalographic Society, 33(4), 317–319. https://doi.org/10.1097/WNP.0000000000000318https://hdl.handle.net/1805/12096Digital EEG recording systems are now widely available and relatively inexpensive. They offer multiple advantages over previous analog/paper systems, such as higher fidelity recording, signal postprocessing, automated detection, and efficient data storage. This document provides guidance for the creation of digital EEG recordings including (1) documentation of patient information, (2) notation of information during the recording, (3) digital signal acquisition parameters during the recording, (4) storage of digital information, and (5) display of digital EEG signals.enPublisher Policydigital mediadigital EEG recording systemsclinical EEGAmerican Clinical Neurophysiology Society Guideline 4: Recording Clinical EEG on Digital MediaArticle