“…This shift, as discussed in Maurer et al (1998), Wallois et al (2012), and Zhu et al (2003) and confirmed by the MRI data in this study, can cause up to a 30% change in thickness in the CSF layer between the brain and skull when changing between prone and supine positions. While this approximately 1 mm shift may seem minor in terms of the size of the brain, sizes of electrodes and their location precision, etc., CSF is up to 10 times more conductive than white or gray matter, and up to 100 times more conductive than bone (Oostendorp et al, 2000;Ramon et al, 2006), so changes in this thin layer of fluid actually lead to large changes in current flow, and hence scalp potential, as pointed out in the EEG forward-modeling and source-localization literature (Ramon et al, 2004(Ramon et al, , 2006Wendel et al, 2008).…”