Estimating true brain connectivity from EEG/MEG data invariant to linear and static transformations in sensor space.

Arne Ewald, Laura Marzetti, Filippo Zappasodi, Frank C Meinecke, Guido Nolte

Fraunhofer FIRST, Intelligent Data Analysis Group, Berlin, Germany; Berlin Institute of Technology, Machine Learning Laboratory, Berlin, Germany.

Journal Article: NeuroImage (impact factor: 5.74). 12/2011; 60(1):476-88. DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2011.11.084

Abstract

The imaginary part of coherency is a measure to investigate the synchronization of brain sources on the EEG/MEG sensor level, robust to artifacts of volume conduction meaning that independent sources cannot generate a significant result. It does not mean, however, that volume conduction is irrelevant when true interactions are present. Here, we analyze in detail the possibilities to construct measures of true brain interactions which are strictly invariant to linear spatial transformations of the sensor data. Specifically, such measures can be constructed from maximization of imaginary coherency in virtual channels, bivariate measures as a corrected variate of imaginary coherence, and global measures indicating the total interaction contained within a space or between two spaces. A complete theoretic framework on this question is provided for second order statistical moments. Relations to existing linear and nonlinear approaches are presented. We applied the methods to resting state EEG data, showing clear interactions at all bands, and to a combined measurement of EEG and MEG during rest condition and a finger tapping task. We found that MEG was capable of observing brain interactions which were not observable in the EEG data.

Source: PubMed

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Keywords

bivariate measures
 
brain interactions
 
brain sources
 
clear interactions
 
combined measurement
 
complete theoretic framework
 
EEG data
 
EEG/MEG sensor level
 
finger tapping task
 
global measures
 
imaginary part
 
linear spatial transformations
 
rest condition
 
resting state EEG data
 
second order statistical moments
 
sensor data
 
true brain interactions
 
virtual channels
 
volume conduction
 
volume conduction meaning