Clinical adoption of innovative EEG technology is contingent on the non-inferiority of the new devices relative to conventional ones. We present the four key results from testing the signal quality of Zeto's WR19 EEG system against a conventional EEG system conducted on patients in a clinical setting. 
Methods: We performed 30-minute simultaneous recordings using the Zeto WR19 (zEEG) and a conventional clinical EEG system (cEEG) in a cohort of 15 patients. We compared the signal quality between the two EEG systems by computing time domain statistics, waveform correlation, spectral density, signal-to-noise ratio, and signal stability. 
Results: All statistical comparisons resulted in signal quality non-inferior relative to cEEG. (i) Time domain statistics, including the Hjorth parameters, showed equivalence between the two systems, except for a significant reduction of sensitivity to electric noise in zEEG relative to cEEG. (ii) The point-by-point waveform correlation between the two systems was acceptable (r>0.6; P<0.001). (iii) Each of the 15 datasets showed a high spectral correlation (r>0.99; P<0.001) and overlapping spectral density across all electrode positions, indicating no systematic signal distortion. (iv) The mean signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of the zEEG system exceeded that of the cEEG by 4.82 dB, equivalent to a 16% improvement. (v) The signal stability was maintained through the recordings.
Conclusion: In terms of signal quality, the zEEG system is non-inferior to conventional clinical EEG systems with respect to all relevant technical parameters that determine EEG readability and interpretability. Zeto's WR19 wireless dry electrode system has signal quality in the clinical EEG space at least equivalent to traditional cEEG recordings.
Keywords: EEG; Hjorth parameters; dry electrodes; signal quality; signal-to-noise ratio; spectral correlation.
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