Sensor Level Functional Connectivity Topography Comparison Between Different References Based EEG and MEG

Huang, Yunzhi and Zhang, Junpeng and Cui, Yuan and Yang, Gang and Liu, Qi and Yin, Guangfu (2018) Sensor Level Functional Connectivity Topography Comparison Between Different References Based EEG and MEG. Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience, 12. ISSN 1662-5153

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Abstract

Sensor-level functional connectivity topography (sFCT) contributes significantly to our understanding of brain networks. sFCT can be constructed using either electroencephalography (EEG) or magnetoencephalography (MEG). Here, we compared sFCT within the EEG modality and between EEG and MEG modalities. We first used simulations to look at how different EEG references—including the Reference Electrode Standardization Technique (REST), average reference (AR), linked mastoids (LM), and left mastoid references (LR)—affect EEG-based sFCT. The results showed that REST decreased the reference effects on scalp EEG recordings, making REST-based sFCT closer to the ground truth (sFCT based on ideal recordings). For the inter-modality simulation comparisons, we compared each type of EEG-sFCT with MEG-sFCT using three metrics to quantize the differences: Relative Error (RE), Overlap Rate (OR), and Hamming Distance (HD). When two sFCTs are similar, RE and HD are low, while OR is high. Results showed that among all reference schemes, EEG-and MEG-sFCT were most similar when the EEG was REST-based and the EEG and MEG were recorded simultaneously. Next, we analyzed simultaneously recorded MEG and EEG data from publicly available face-recognition experiments using a similar procedure as in the simulations. The results showed (1) if MEG-sFCT is the standard, REST—and LM-based sFCT provided results closer to this standard in the terms of HD; (2) REST-based sFCT and MEG-sFCT had the highest similarity in terms of RE; (3) REST-based sFCT had the most overlapping edges with MEG-sFCT in terms of OR. This study thus provides new insights into the effect of different reference schemes on sFCT and the similarity between MEG and EEG in terms of sFCT.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Academic Digital Library > Biological Science
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email info@academicdigitallibrary.org
Date Deposited: 11 Feb 2023 06:39
Last Modified: 18 Sep 2023 11:39
URI: http://publications.article4sub.com/id/eprint/669

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