Publication details

Spatial-temporal-spectral EEG patterns of BOLD functional network connectivity dynamics

Investor logo
Investor logo
Authors

LAMOŠ Martin MAREČEK Radek SLAVÍČEK Tomáš MIKL Michal REKTOR Ivan JAN J.

Year of publication 2018
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source JOURNAL OF NEURAL ENGINEERING
MU Faculty or unit

Central European Institute of Technology

Citation
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1741-2552/aab66b
Keywords multimodal neuroimaging; dynamic functional connectivity; blind decomposition; large-scale brain networks; parallel factor analysis; independent component analysis
Description Objective. Growing interest in the examination of large-scale brain network functional connectivity dynamics is accompanied by an effort to find the electrophysiological correlates. The commonly used constraints applied to spatial and spectral domains during electroencephalogram (EEG) data analysis may leave part of the neural activity unrecognized. We propose an approach that blindly reveals multimodal EEG spectral patterns that are related to the dynamics of the BOLD functional network connectivity. Approach. The blind decomposition of EEG spectrogram by parallel factor analysis has been shown to be a useful technique for uncovering patterns of neural activity. The simultaneously acquired BOLD fMRI data were decomposed by independent component analysis. Dynamic functional connectivity was computed on the component's time series using a sliding window correlation, and between-network connectivity states were then defined based on the values of the correlation coefficients. ANOVA tests were performed to assess the relationships between the dynamics of between-network connectivity states and the fluctuations of EEG spectral patterns. Main results. We found three patterns related to the dynamics of between-network connectivity states. The first pattern has dominant peaks in the alpha, beta, and gamma bands and is related to the dynamics between the auditory, sensorimotor, and attentional networks. The second pattern, with dominant peaks in the theta and low alpha bands, is related to the visual and default mode network. The third pattern, also with peaks in the theta and low alpha bands, is related to the auditory and frontal network. Significance. Our previous findings revealed a relationship between EEG spectral pattern fluctuations and the hemodynamics of large-scale brain networks. In this study, we suggest that the relationship also exists at the level of functional connectivity dynamics among large-scale brain networks when no standard spatial and spectral constraints are applied on the EEG data.
Related projects:

You are running an old browser version. We recommend updating your browser to its latest version.

More info