“…Recent studies have shown EEG fast activities can be recorded non-invasively from the scalp recordings (Andrade-Valenca et al, 2011;Bernardo et al, 2018;Kobayashi et al, 2004;Kobayashi et al, 2015;Kramer et al, 2019;Nariai et al, 2017;Nariai et al, 2018;Pizzo et al, 2016;Wu et al, 2008). Scalp EEG HFOs have the potential to localize seizure onset zones (Andrade-Valenca et al, 2011;Bernardo et al, 2018;Nariai et al, 2017;Tamilia et al, 2020), and to monitor disease activity in epileptic spasms (Kobayashi et al, 2015), Rolandic epilepsy (Kobayashi et al, 2011;van Klink et al, 2016), and epileptic encephalopathy with continuous spike-and-wave during sleep (CSWS) (Cao et al, 2019;Kobayashi et al, 2010). Additionally, HFOs coupled with slow-wave activity strongly localize to epileptic brain regions in children with infantile spasms and other types of focal epilepsy in invasive monitoring (Iimura et al, 2018;Motoi et al, 2018;Nonoda et al, 2016;Song et al, 2017;Weiss et al, 2016) and may reflect disease activity in scalp EEG in epileptic spasms (Bernardo et al, 2020.…”