论文标题

脑电图中大振幅突发的特定比例特定动力学捕获行为有意义的可变性

Scale-specific dynamics of large-amplitude bursts in EEG capture behaviorally meaningful variability

论文作者

Bansal, Kanika, Garcia, Javier O., Lauharatanahirun, Nina, Muldoon, Sarah F., Sajda, Paul, Vettel, Jean M.

论文摘要

人们认为,神经活动中的大振幅爆发被认为可以洞悉神经系统中复杂的空间分布的相互作用。例如,在人类神经影像学中,在静止状态期间发生的雪崩表现出规模不变的动力学,这支持了以下假设:大脑在临界点附近运行,以实现远距离的空间交流。实际上,已经提出,这种规模不变的动力学以这些雪崩中的幂律分布为特征,在神经系统中是普遍的,并通过一种共同的机制出现。虽然对雪崩和随后的批判性的分析越来越被视为使用复杂系统理论理解大脑功能的框架,但尚不清楚该框架如何解释无所不在的认知变异性,无论是跨个体和/或任务。为了解决这个问题,我们分析了健康人类脑电图活动中的急剧活动,以及两个不同的任务条件,这些任务条件在认知需求和产生了每个人所特有的行为措施中不同。在休息和任务条件下,我们观察到雪崩动力学表现出规模不变的特征,但其特定特征有所不同,证明了个人变异性。使用新的度量标准,我们称为归一化参与度,估计大脑区域产生高振幅爆发的可能性,我们还研究了雪崩动力学的区域特征。归一化参与不仅显示了预期的个人和任务依赖性变异性,还显示与个人行为相关的比例特异性。我们的发现扩展了我们对雪崩特征的理解,并支持了新兴的理论观念,即主动人脑的动态靠近临界区域,而不是一个奇异的关键状态。

Cascading large-amplitude bursts in neural activity, termed avalanches, are thought to provide insight into the complex spatially distributed interactions in neural systems. In human neuroimaging, for example, avalanches occurring during resting-state show scale-invariant dynamics, supporting the hypothesis that the brain operates near a critical point that enables long range spatial communication. In fact, it has been suggested that such scale-invariant dynamics, characterized by a power-law distribution in these avalanches, are universal in neural systems and emerge through a common mechanism. While the analysis of avalanches and subsequent criticality is increasingly seen as a framework for using complex systems theory to understand brain function, it is unclear how the framework would account for the omnipresent cognitive variability, whether across individuals and/or tasks. To address this, we analyzed avalanches in the EEG activity of healthy humans during rest as well as two distinct task conditions that varied in cognitive demands and produced behavioral measures unique to each individual. In both rest and task conditions we observed that avalanche dynamics demonstrate scale-invariant characteristics, but differ in their specific features, demonstrating individual variability. Using a new metric we call normalized engagement, which estimates the likelihood for a brain region to produce high-amplitude bursts, we also investigated regional features of avalanche dynamics. Normalized engagement showed not only the expected individual and task dependent variability, but also scale-specificity that correlated with individual behavior. Our findings expand our understanding of avalanche features and are supportive of the emerging theoretical idea that the dynamics of an active human brain operate close to a critical-like region and not a singular critical-state.

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