Single pulse electrical stimulation experiments produce pulse-evoked potentials used to infer brain connectivity. The choice of recording reference for intracranial electrodes remains non-standardized and can significantly impact data interpretation. When the reference electrode is affected by stimulation or evoked brain activity, it can contaminate the pulse-evoked potentials recorded at all other electrodes and influence interpretation of findings. We highlight this specific issue in intracranial EEG datasets from two subjects recorded at separate institutions. We present several intuitive metrics to detect the presence of reference contamination and offer practical guidance on different mitigation strategies. Either switching the reference electrode or re-referencing to an adjusted common average effectively mitigated the reference contamination issue, as evidenced by increased variability in pulse-evoked potentials across the brain. Overall, we demonstrate the importance of clear quality checks and preprocessing steps that should be performed before analysis of single pulse electrical stimulation data.
Keywords: Intracranial EEG; Stereo-EEG; brain connectivity; cortico-cortical evoked potentials; pulse-evoked potentials; re-referencing; single pulse electrical stimulation.