5 research outputs found

    Non-parametric statistical thresholding for sparse magnetoencephalography source reconstructions.

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    Uncovering brain activity from magnetoencephalography (MEG) data requires solving an ill-posed inverse problem, greatly confounded by noise, interference, and correlated sources. Sparse reconstruction algorithms, such as Champagne, show great promise in that they provide focal brain activations robust to these confounds. In this paper, we address the technical considerations of statistically thresholding brain images obtained from sparse reconstruction algorithms. The source power distribution of sparse algorithms makes this class of algorithms ill-suited to "conventional" techniques. We propose two non-parametric resampling methods hypothesized to be compatible with sparse algorithms. The first adapts the maximal statistic procedure to sparse reconstruction results and the second departs from the maximal statistic, putting forth a less stringent procedure that protects against spurious peaks. Simulated MEG data and three real data sets are utilized to demonstrate the efficacy of the proposed methods. Two sparse algorithms, Champagne and generalized minimum-current estimation (G-MCE), are compared to two non-sparse algorithms, a variant of minimum-norm estimation, sLORETA, and an adaptive beamformer. The results, in general, demonstrate that the already sparse images obtained from Champagne and G-MCE are further thresholded by both proposed statistical thresholding procedures. While non-sparse algorithms are thresholded by the maximal statistic procedure, they are not made sparse. The work presented here is one of the first attempts to address the problem of statistically thresholding sparse reconstructions, and aims to improve upon this already advantageous and powerful class of algorithm

    Neural Correlates of Visual Motion Prediction

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    Predicting the trajectories of moving objects in our surroundings is important for many life scenarios, such as driving, walking, reaching, hunting and combat. We determined human subjects’ performance and task-related brain activity in a motion trajectory prediction task. The task required spatial and motion working memory as well as the ability to extrapolate motion information in time to predict future object locations. We showed that the neural circuits associated with motion prediction included frontal, parietal and insular cortex, as well as the thalamus and the visual cortex. Interestingly, deactivation of many of these regions seemed to be more closely related to task performance. The differential activity during motion prediction vs. direct observation was also correlated with task performance. The neural networks involved in our visual motion prediction task are significantly different from those that underlie visual motion memory and imagery. Our results set the stage for the examination of the effects of deficiencies in these networks, such as those caused by aging and mental disorders, on visual motion prediction and its consequences on mobility related daily activities

    Cortical swallowing processing in early subacute stroke

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Dysphagia is a major complication in hemispheric as well as brainstem stroke patients causing aspiration pneumonia and increased mortality. Little is known about the recovery from dysphagia after stroke. The aim of the present study was to determine the different patterns of cortical swallowing processing in patients with hemispheric and brainstem stroke with and without dysphagia in the early subacute phase.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>We measured brain activity by mean of whole-head MEG in 37 patients with different stroke localisation 8.2 +/- 4.8 days after stroke to study changes in cortical activation during self-paced swallowing. An age matched group of healthy subjects served as controls. Data were analyzed by means of synthetic aperture magnetometry and group analyses were performed using a permutation test.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Our results demonstrate strong bilateral reduction of cortical swallowing activation in dysphagic patients with hemispheric stroke. In hemispheric stroke without dysphagia, bilateral activation was found. In the small group of patients with brainstem stroke we observed a reduction of cortical activation and a right hemispheric lateralization.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Bulbar central pattern generators coordinate the pharyngeal swallowing phase. The observed right hemispheric lateralization in brainstem stroke can therefore be interpreted as acute cortical compensation of subcortically caused dysphagia. The reduction of activation in brainstem stroke patients and dysphagic patients with cortical stroke could be explained in terms of diaschisis.</p

    BrainWave: A Matlab Toolbox for Beamformer Source Analysis of MEG Data

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    BrainWave is an easy-to-use Matlab toolbox for the analysis of magnetoencephalography data. It provides a graphical user interface for performing minimum-variance beamforming analysis with rapid and interactive visualization of evoked and induced brain activity. This article provides an overview of the main features of BrainWave with a step-by-step demonstration of how to proceed from raw experimental data to group source images and time series analyses. This includes data selection and pre-processing, magnetic resonance image co-registration and normalization procedures, and the generation of volumetric (whole-brain) or cortical surface based source images, and corresponding source time series as virtual sensor waveforms and their time-frequency representations. We illustrate these steps using example data from a recently published study on response inhibition (Isabella et al., 2015) using the sustained attention to response task paradigm in 12 healthy adult participants. In this task participants were required to press a button with their right index finger to a rapidly presented series of numerical digits and withhold their response to an infrequently presented target digit. This paradigm elicited movement-locked brain responses, as well as task-related modulation of brain rhythmic activity in different frequency bands (e.g., theta, beta, and gamma), and is used to illustrate two different types of source reconstruction implemented in the BrainWave toolbox: (1) event-related beamforming of averaged brain responses and (2) beamformer analysis of modulation of rhythmic brain activity using the synthetic aperture magnetometry algorithm. We also demonstrate the ability to generate group contrast images between different response types, using the example of frontal theta activation patterns during error responses (failure to withhold on target trials). BrainWave is free academic software available for download at http://cheynelab.utoronto.ca/brainwave along with supporting software and documentation. The development of the BrainWave toolbox was supported by grants from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, the National Research and Engineering Research Council of Canada, and the Ontario Brain Institute
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