15 research outputs found

    Physiological complexity of EEG as a proxy for dementia risk prediction: a review and preliminary cross-section analysis

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    The aim of this work is to give the readers a review (perspective) of prior work on this kind of complexity-based detection from resting-state EEG and present our preliminary cross-section analysis results on how EEG complexity of supposedly healthy senior persons can serve as an early warning to clinicians. Together with the use of wearables for health, this approach to early detection can be done out of clinical setting improving the chances of increasing the quality of life in seniors.Comment: 19 pages, 1 figure, 1 tabl

    Multifractal techniques for analysis and classification of emphysema images

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    This thesis proposes, develops and evaluates different multifractal methods for detection, segmentation and classification of medical images. This is achieved by studying the structures of the image and extracting the statistical self-similarity measures characterized by the Holder exponent, and using them to develop texture features for segmentation and classification. The theoretical framework for fulfilling these goals is based on the efficient computation of fractal dimension, which has been explored and extended in this work. This thesis investigates different ways of computing the fractal dimension of digital images and validates the accuracy of each method with fractal images with predefined fractal dimension. The box counting and the Higuchi methods are used for the estimation of fractal dimensions. A prototype system of the Higuchi fractal dimension of the computed tomography (CT) image is used to identify and detect some of the regions of the image with the presence of emphysema. The box counting method is also used for the development of the multifractal spectrum and applied to detect and identify the emphysema patterns. We propose a multifractal based approach for the classification of emphysema patterns by calculating the local singularity coefficients of an image using four multifractal intensity measures. One of the primary statistical measures of self-similarity used in the processing of tissue images is the Holder exponent (α-value) that represents the power law, which the intensity distribution satisfies in the local pixel neighbourhoods. The fractal dimension corresponding to each α-value gives a multifractal spectrum f(α) that was used as a feature descriptor for classification. A feature selection technique is introduced and implemented to extract some of the important features that could increase the discriminating capability of the descriptors and generate the maximum classification accuracy of the emphysema patterns. We propose to further improve the classification accuracy of emphysema CT patterns by combining the features extracted from the alpha-histograms and the multifractal descriptors to generate a new descriptor. The performances of the classifiers are measured by using the error matrix and the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC). The results at this stage demonstrated the proposed cascaded approach significantly improves the classification accuracy. Another multifractal based approach using a direct determination approach is investigated to demonstrate how multifractal characteristic parameters could be used for the identification of emphysema patterns in HRCT images. This further analysis reveals the multi-scale structures and characteristic properties of the emphysema images through the generalized dimensions. The results obtained confirm that this approach can also be effectively used for detecting and identifying emphysema patterns in CT images. Two new descriptors are proposed for accurate classification of emphysema patterns by hybrid concatenation of the local features extracted from the local binary patterns (LBP) and the global features obtained from the multifractal images. The proposed combined feature descriptors of the LBP and f(α) produced a very good performance with an overall classification accuracy of 98%. These performances outperform other state-of-the-art methods for emphysema pattern classification and demonstrate the discriminating power and robustness of the combined features for accurate classification of emphysema CT images. Overall, experimental results have shown that the multifractal could be effectively used for the classifications and detections of emphysema patterns in HRCT images

    Multiple System Modelling and Analysis of Physiological and Brain Activity and Performance at Rest and During Exercise

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    One of the current interests of exercise physiologists is to understand the nature and control of fatigue related to physical activity to optimise athletic performance. Therefore, this research focuses on the mathematical modelling and analysis of the energy system pathways and the system control mechanisms to investigate the various human metabolic processes involved both at rest and during exercise. The first case study showed that the PCr utilisation was the highest energy contributor during sprint running, and the rate of ATP production for each anaerobic subsystem was similar for each athlete. The second study showed that the energy expenditure derived from the aerobic and anaerobic processes for different types of pacing were significantly different. The third study demonstrated the presence of the control mechanisms, and their characteristics as well as complexity differed significantly for any physiological organ system. The fourth study showed that the control mechanisms manifest themselves in specific ranges of frequency bands, and these influence athletic performance. The final study demonstrated a significant difference in both reaction time and accuracy of the responses to visual cues between the control and exercise-involved cognitive trials. Moreover, the difference in the EEG power ratio at specific regions of the brain; the difference in the ERP components’ amplitudes and latencies; and the difference in entropy of the EEG signals represented the physiological factors in explaining the poor cognitive performance of the participants following an exhaustive exercise bout. Therefore, by using mathematical modelling and analysis of the energy system pathways and the system control mechanisms responsible for homeostasis, this research has expanded the knowledge how performance is regulated during physical activity and together with the support of the existing biological control theories to explain the development of fatigue during physical activity

    Multiple system modelling and analysis of physiological and brain activity and performance at rest and during exercise

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    One of the current interests of exercise physiologists is to understand the nature and control of fatigue related to physical activity to optimise athletic performance. Therefore, this research focuses on the mathematical modelling and analysis of the energy system pathways and the system control mechanisms to investigate the various human metabolic processes involved both at rest and during exercise. The first case study showed that the PCr utilisation was the highest energy contributor during sprint running, and the rate of ATP production for each anaerobic subsystem was similar for each athlete. The second study showed that the energy expenditure derived from the aerobic and anaerobic processes for different types of pacing were significantly different. The third study demonstrated the presence of the control mechanisms, and their characteristics as well as complexity differed significantly for any physiological organ system. The fourth study showed that the control mechanisms manifest themselves in specific ranges of frequency bands, and these influence athletic performance. The final study demonstrated a significant difference in both reaction time and accuracy of the responses to visual cues between the control and exercise-involved cognitive trials. Moreover, the difference in the EEG power ratio at specific regions of the brain; the difference in the ERP components’ amplitudes and latencies; and the difference in entropy of the EEG signals represented the physiological factors in explaining the poor cognitive performance of the participants following an exhaustive exercise bout. Therefore, by using mathematical modelling and analysis of the energy system pathways and the system control mechanisms responsible for homeostasis, this research has expanded the knowledge how performance is regulated during physical activity and together with the support of the existing biological control theories to explain the development of fatigue during physical activity.EThOS - Electronic Theses Online ServiceGBUnited Kingdo

    Nonlinear dynamics and modeling of heart and brain signals

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    Ph.DDOCTOR OF PHILOSOPH

    Self-Organized Criticality as a Neurodynamical Correlate of Consciousness: A neurophysiological approach to measure states of consciousness based on EEG-complexity features

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    Background and Objectives This thesis was based on the hypothesis that the physics-derived theoretical framework of self-organized criticality can be applied to the neuronal dynamics of the human brain. From a consciousness science perspective, this is especially appealing as critical brain dynamics imply a vicinity a phase transition, which is associated with optimized information processing functions as well as the largest repertoire of configurations that a system explores throughout its temporal evolution. Hence, self-organised criticality could serve as a neurodynamical correlate for consciousness, which provides the possibility of deriving empirically testable neurophysiological indices suitable to characterise and quantify states of consciousness. The purpose of this work was to experimentally examine the feasibility of the self-organized criticality theory as a correlate for states of consciousness. Therefore, it was aimed at answering the following research questions based on the analysis of three 64 channel EEG datasets: (i) Can signatures of self-organized criticality be found on the level of the EEG in terms of scale-free distribution of neuronal avalanches and the presence of long-range temporal correlations (LRTC) in neuronal oscillations? (ii) Are criticality features suitable to differentiate state of consciousness in the spectrum of wakefulness? (iii) Can the neuronal dynamics be shifted towards the critical point of a phase transition associated with optimized information processing function by mind-body interventions? (iv) Can an explicit relationship to other nonlinear complexity features and power spectral density parameter be identified? (v) Do EEG-based criticality features reflect individual temperament traits? Material and Methods (1): Re-analysis: Thirty participants highly proficient in meditation (mean age 47 years, 11 females/19 males, meditation experience of at least 5 years practice or more than 1000 h of total meditation time) were measured with 64-channel EEG during one session consisting of a task-free baseline resting, a reading condition and three meditation conditions, namely thoughtless emptiness, presence monitoring and focused attention. (2): 64-channel EEG was recorded from 34 participants (mean age 36.0 ±13.4 years, 24 females/ 10 males) before, during and after a professional singing bowl massage. Further, psychometric data was assessed including absorption capacity defined as the individual’s capacity for engaging attentional resources in sensory and imaginative experiences measured by the Tellegen-Absorption Scale (TAS-D), subjective changes in in body sensation, emotional state, and mental state (CSP-14) as well as the phenomenology of consciousness (PCI-K). (3): Electrophysiological data (64 channels of EEG, EOG, ECG, skin conductance, and respiration) was recorded from 116 participants (mean age 40.0 ±13.4 years, 83 females/ 33 males) – in collaboration with the Institute of Psychology, Bundeswehr University Munich - during a task-free baseline resting state. The individual level of sensory processing sensitivity was assessed using the High Sensitive Person Scale (HSPS-G). The datasets were analysed applying analytical tools from self-organized criticality theory (detrended fluctuation analysis, neuronal avalanche analysis), nonlinear complexity algorithms (multiscale entropy, Higuchi’s fractal dimension) and power spectral density. In study 1 and 2, task conditions were contrasted, and effect sizes were compared using a paired two-tailed t-test calculated across participants, and features. T-values were corrected for multiple testing using false discovery rate. To calculate correlations between the EEG features, Spearman’s rank correlation was applied after determining that the distribution was not appropriate for parametric testing by the Shapiro-Wilk test. In addition, in study 1, a discrimination analysis was carried out to determine the classification performance of the EEG features. Here, partial least squares regression and receiver operating characteristics analysis was applied. To determine whether the EEG features reflect individual temperament traits, the individual level of absorption capacity (study 2) and sensory processing sensitivity (study 3) was correlated with the EEG features using Spearman’s rank correlation. Results Signatures of self-organized criticality in the form of scale-free distribution of neuronal avalanches and long-range temporal correlations (LRTCs) in the amplitude of neural oscillations were observed in three distinct EEG-datasets. EEG criticality as well as complexity features were suitable to characterise distinct states of consciousness. In study 1, compared to the task-free resting condition, all three meditative states revealed significantly reduced long-range temporal correlation with moderate effect sizes (presence monitoring: d= -0.49, p<.001; thoughtless emptiness: d= -0.37, p<.001; and focused attention: d= -0.28, p=.003). The critical exponent was suitable to differentiate between focused attention and presence monitoring (d= -0.32, p=.02). Further, in study 2, the criticality features significantly changed during the course of the experiment, whereby values indicated a shift towards the critical regime during the sound condition. Both analyses of the first and second dataset revealed that the critical exponent was significantly negatively correlated with the sample entropy, the scaling exponent resulting from the DFA denoting the amount of long-range temporal correlations as well as Higuchi’s fractal dimension in each condition, respectively. In addition, the critical scaling exponent was found to be significantly negatively correlated with the trait absorption (Spearman's ρ= -0.39, p= .007), whereas an association between critical dynamics and the level of sensory processing sensitivity could not be verified (study 3). Conclusion The findings of this thesis suggest that neuronal dynamics are governed by the phenomena of self-organized criticality. EEG-based criticality features were shown to be sensitive to detect experimentally induced alterations in the state of consciousness. Further, an explicit relationship with nonlinear measures determining the degree of neuronal complexity was identified. Thus, self-organized criticality seems feasible as a neurodynamical correlate for consciousness with the potential to quantify and characterize states of consciousness. Its agreement with the current most influencing theories in the field of consciousness research is discussed
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