Extracting information from cortical connectivity patterns estimated from high resolution EEG recordings: A theoretical graph approach

被引:32
|
作者
De Vico Fallani, Fabrizio
Astolfi, Laura
Cincotti, Febo
Mattia, Donatella
Tocci, Andrea
Grazia Marciani, Maria
Colosinio, Alfredo
Salinari, Serenella
Gao, Shangkai
Cichocki, Andrzej
Babiloni, Fabio
机构
[1] Univ Roma La Sapienza, Dept Human Physiol & Pharmacol, I-00185 Rome, Italy
[2] Univ Roma La Sapienza, Interdep Res Ctr Models & Informat Anal Biomed Sy, I-00185 Rome, Italy
[3] IRCCS, Fdn Santa Lucia, Rome, Italy
[4] Univ Roma La Sapienza, Dept Informat & Sistemist, Rome, Italy
[5] Tsinghua Univ, Dept Neural Engn, Beijing 100084, Peoples R China
[6] Riken Inst Phys & Chem Res, Wako, Saitama, Japan
关键词
efficiency; degree distributions; small-world; digraph; DTF; high resolution EEG; spinal cord injured; foot movement;
D O I
10.1007/s10548-007-0019-0
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Over the last 20 years, a body of techniques known as high resolution EEG has allowed precise estimation of cortical activity from non-invasive EEG measurements. The availability of cortical waveforms from non-invasive EEG recordings allows to have not only the level of activation within a single region of interest (ROI) during a particular task, but also to estimate the causal relationships among activities of several cortical regions. However, interpreting resulting connectivity patterns is still an open issue, due to the difficulty to provide an objective measure of their properties across different subjects or groups. A novel approach addressed to solve this difficulty consists in manipulating these functional brain networks as graph objects for which a large body of indexes and tools are available in literature and already tested for complex networks at different levels of scale (Social, WorldWide-Web and Proteomics). In the present work, we would like to show the suitability of such approach, showing results obtained comparing separately two groups of subjects during the same motor task and two different motor tasks performed by the same group. In the first experiment two groups of subjects (healthy and spinal cord injured patients) were compared when they moved and attempted to move simultaneously their right foot and lips, respectively. The contrast between the foot-lips movement and the simple foot movement was addressed in the second experiment for the population of the healthy subjects. For both the experiments, the main question is whether the "architecture" of the functional connectivity networks obtained could show properties that are different in the two groups or in the two tasks. All the functional connectivity networks gathered in the two experiments showed ordered properties and significant differences from "random" networks having the same characteristic sizes. The proposed approach, based on the use of indexes derived from graph theory, can apply to cerebral connectivity patterns estimated not only from the EEG signals but also from different brain imaging methods.
引用
收藏
页码:125 / 136
页数:12
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