A free competency-based EEG curriculum platform designed for neurology residency and epilepsy fellowship programs.
EEGMaster was developed by academic epileptologists to support structured EEG education, competency assessment, and longitudinal trainee development. Programs may use EEGMaster as a standalone EEG curriculum or integrate it within existing educational frameworks.
“EEGMaster was built to support both independent study and program-wide assessment, helping learners develop the pattern recognition and conceptual framework essential for EEG interpretation.”
Structured EEG education with modern assessment and analytics tools.
Normal and abnormal EEG examples across diverse neurologic conditions, including text explanations, images, videos, and interactive EEG review.
Longitudinal spaced-learning challenges reinforce practical interpretation skills and active learning.
Six milestone-aligned 25-question assessments evaluate practical EEG interpretation competency across learner levels.
Track resident performance longitudinally and benchmark against local and national learner data.
Topic-focused questions and automated feedback identify strengths and educational gaps.
Use EEGMaster as a primary EEG curriculum or supplement existing didactic programs.
Interactive educational tools, evolving curriculum modules, competency assessment, and performance analytics.
EEGMaster emphasizes clinically meaningful EEG interpretation and practical pattern recognition rather than isolated memorization.
Assessments and educational modules are aligned with progressive residency competency expectations.
Questions reflect real-world EEG interpretation scenarios encountered during clinical practice.
Repeated exposure and spaced reinforcement support durable EEG learning.
Yes. EEGMaster is currently available as a free educational resource.
Yes. Program-level dashboards provide longitudinal analytics and institutional benchmarking.
Yes. EEGMaster supports both individual self-directed learning and formal
program integration.
Read more about EEG learning here.
Yes. Assessments underwent iterative review and expert validation by
board-certified EEG specialists.
Read about the curriculum development process here.