44 research outputs found
A neurophysiological deficit in early visual processing in schizophrenia patients with auditory hallucinations: Visual N1 and auditory hallucinations in schizophrenia
Existing 67-channel ERPs, obtained during recognition and working memory paradigms with words or faces, were used to examine early visual processing in schizophrenia patients prone to auditory hallucinations (AH, n = 26) or not (NH, n = 49) and healthy controls (HC, n = 46). Current source density (CSD) transforms revealed distinct, strongly left- (words) or right-lateralized (faces; N170) inferior-temporal N1 sinks (150 ms) in each group. N1 was quantified by temporal PCA of peak-adjusted CSDs. For words and faces in both paradigms, N1 was substantially reduced in AH compared with NH and HC, who did not differ from each other. The difference in N1 between AH and NH was not due to overall symptom severity or performance accuracy, with both groups showing comparable memory deficits. Our findings extend prior reports of reduced auditory N1 in AH, suggesting a broader early perceptual integration deficit that is not limited to the auditory modality
Frontal theta and posterior alpha in resting EEG: A critical examination of convergent and discriminant validity
Prior research has identified two resting EEG biomarkers with potential for predicting functional outcomes in depression: theta current density in frontal brain regions (especially rostral anterior cingulate cortex) and alpha power over posterior scalp regions. As little is known about the discriminant and convergent validity of these putative biomarkers, a thorough evaluation of these psychometric properties was conducted toward the goal of improving clinical utility of these markers. Resting 71āchannel EEG recorded from 35 healthy adults at two sessions (1āweek retest) were used to systematically compare different quantification techniques for theta and alpha sources at scalp (surface Laplacian or current source density [CSD]) and brain (distributed inverse; exact low resolution electromagnetic tomography [eLORETA]) level. Signal quality was evaluated with signalātoānoise ratio, participantālevel spectra, and frequency PCA covariance decomposition. Convergent and discriminant validity were assessed within a multitraitāmultimethod framework. Posterior alpha was reliably identified as two spectral components, each with unique spatial patterns and condition effects (eyes open/closed), high signal quality, and good convergent and discriminant validity. In contrast, frontal theta was characterized by one lowāvariance component, low signal quality, lack of a distinct spectral peak, and mixed validity. Correlations between candidate biomarkers suggest that posterior alpha components constitute reliable, convergent, and discriminant biometrics in healthy adults. Componentābased identification of spectral activity (CSD/eLORETAāfPCA) was superior to fixed, a priori frequency bands. Improved quantification and conceptualization of frontal theta is necessary to determine clinical utility.Magnitude of frontal theta (rostral ACC eLORETA source amplitude) and posterior alpha (spectral components of scalp current source density) at rest have been considered candidate EEG biomarkers of depression outcomes. Given inconsistent findings, we examined the discriminant and convergent validity of these measures in healthy adults. Unlike theta, two distinct alpha components constituted reliable, convergent, and discriminant biometrics. While results have marked implications for clinical utility, we make several recommendations for improving the psychometric properties of resting frontal theta.Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/153675/1/psyp13483.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/153675/2/psyp13483_am.pd
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Temporal Stability Of Posterior EEG Alpha Over Twelve Years
Objective: We previously identiļ¬ed posterior EEG alpha as a potential biomarker for antidepressant treatment response. To meet the deļ¬nition of a trait biomarker or endophenotype, it should be independent of the course of depression. Accordingly, this report evaluated the temporal stability of posterior EEG alpha at rest. Methods: Resting EEG was recorded from 70 participants (29 male; 46 adults), during testing sessions separated by 12 Ā± 1.1 years. EEG alpha was identiļ¬ed, separated and quantiļ¬ed using reference-free methods that combine current source density (CSD) with principal components analysis (PCA). Measures of overall (eyes closed-plus-open) and net (eyes closed-minus-open) posterior alpha amplitude and asymmetry were compared across testing sessions. Results: Overall alpha was stable for the full sample (Spearman-Brown [rSB] = .834, Pearsonās r = .718), and showed excellent reliability for adults (rSB = .918; r = 0.848). Net alpha showed acceptable reliability for adults (rSB = .750; r = .600). Hemispheric asymmetries (right-minus-left hemisphere) of posterior overall alpha showed signiļ¬cant correlations, but revealed acceptable reliability only for adults (rSB = .728; r = .573). Findings were highly comparable between 29 male and 41 female participants. Conclusions: Overall posterior EEG alpha amplitude is reliable over long time intervals in adults. Signiļ¬cance: The temporal stability of posterior EEG alpha oscillations at rest over long time intervals is indicative of an individual trait. Ć 2018 International Federation of Clinical Neurophysiology. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved
Neuronal Generator Patterns At Scalp Elicited By Lateralized Aversive Pictures Reveal Consecutive Stages Of Motivated Attention
Event-related potential (ERP) studies have provided evidence for an allocation of attentional resources to enhance perceptual processing of motivationally salient stimuli. Emotional modulation affects several consecutive components associated with stages of affective-cognitive processing, beginning as early as 100ā200 ms after stimulus onset. In agreement with the notion that the right parietotemporal region is critically involved during the perception of arousing affective stimuli, some ERP studies have reported asymmetric emotional ERP effects. However, it is difļ¬cult to separate emotional from non-emotional effects because differences in stimulus content unrelated to affective salience or task demands may also be associated with lateralized function or promote cognitive processing. Other concerns pertain to the operational deļ¬nition and statistical independence of ERP component measures, their dependence on an EEG reference, and spatial smearing due to volume conduction, all of which impede the identiļ¬cation of distinct scalp activation patterns associated with affective processing. Building on prior research using a visual half-ļ¬eld paradigm with highly controlled emotional stimuli (pictures of cosmetic surgery patients showing disordered [negative] or healed [neutral] facial areas before or after treatment), 72channel ERPs recorded from 152 individuals (ages 13ā68 years; 81 female) were transformed into reference-free current source density (CSD) waveforms and submitted to temporal principal components analysis (PCA) to identify their underlying neuronal generator patterns. Using both nonparametric randomization tests and repeated measures ANOVA, robust effects of emotional content were found over parietooccipital regions for CSD factors corresponding to N2 sink (212 ms peak latency), P3 source (385 ms) and a late centroparietal source (630 ms), all indicative of greater positivity for negative than neutral stimuli. For the N2 sink, emotional effects were right-lateralized and modulated by hemiļ¬eld, with larger amplitude and asymmetry for left hemiļ¬eld (right hemisphere) presentations. For all three factors, more positive amplitudes at parietooccipital sites were associated with increased ratings of negative valence and greater arousal. Distributed inverse solutions of the CSDPCA-based emotional effects implicated a sequence of maximal activations in right occipitotemporal cortex, bilateral posterior cingulate cortex, and bilateral inferior temporal cortex. These ļ¬ndings are consistent with hierarchical activations of the ventral visual pathway reļ¬ecting subsequent processing stages in response to motivationally salient stimuli
Motivated Attention And Family Risk For Depression: Neuronal Generator Patterns At Scalp Elicited By Lateralized Aversive Pictures Reveal Blunted Emotional Responsivity
Behavioral and electrophysiologic evidence suggests that major depression (MDD) involves right parietotemporal dysfunction, a region activated by arousing aļ¬ective stimuli. Building on prior event-related potential (ERP) ļ¬ndings (Kayser et al. 2016 NeuroImage 142:337ā350), this study examined whether these abnormalities also characterize individuals at clinical high risk for MDD. We systematically explored the impact of family risk status and personal history of depression and anxiety on three distinct stages of emotional processing comprising the late positive potential (LPP). ERPs (72 channels) were recorded from 74 high and 53 low risk individuals (age 13ā59 years, 58 male) during a visual half-ļ¬eld paradigm using highly-controlled pictures of cosmetic surgery patients showing disordered (negative) or healed (neutral) facial areas before or after treatment. Reference-free current source density (CSD) transformations of ERP waveforms were quantiļ¬ed by temporal principal components analysis (tPCA). Component scores of prominent CSD-tPCA factors sensitive to emotional content were analyzed via permutation tests and repeated measures ANOVA for mixed factorial designs with unstructured covariance matrix, including gender, age and clinical covariates. Factor-based distributed inverse solutions provided descriptive estimates of emotional brain activations at group level corresponding to hierarchical activations along ventral visual processing stream. Risk status aļ¬ected emotional responsivity (increased positivity to negative-than-neutral stimuli) overlapping early N2 sink (peak latency 212 ms), P3 source (385 ms), and a late centroparietal source (630 ms). High risk individuals had reduced right-greater-thanleft emotional lateralization involving occipitotemporal cortex (N2 sink) and bilaterally reduced emotional eļ¬ects involving posterior cingulate (P3 source) and inferior temporal cortex (630 ms) when compared to those at low risk. While the early emotional eļ¬ects were enhanced for left hemiļ¬eld (right hemisphere) presentations, hemiļ¬eld modulations did not diļ¬er between risk groups, suggesting top-down rather than bottom-up eļ¬ects of risk. Groups did not diļ¬er in their stimulus valence or arousal ratings. Similar eļ¬ects were seen for individuals with a lifetime history of depression or anxiety disorder in comparison to those without. However, there was no evidence that risk status and history of MDD or anxiety disorder interacted in their impact on emotional responsivity, suggesting largely independent attenuation of attentional resource allocation to enhance perceptual processing of motivationally salient stimuli. These ļ¬ndings further suggest that a deļ¬cit in motivated attention preceding conscious awareness may be a marker of risk for depression
Demonstrating testāretest reliability of electrophysiological measures for healthy adults in a multisite study of biomarkers of antidepressant treatment response
Growing evidence suggests that loudness dependency of auditory evoked potentials (LDAEP) and resting EEG alpha and theta may be biological markers for predicting response to antidepressants. In spite of this promise, little is known about the joint reliability of these markers, and thus their clinical applicability. New standardized procedures were developed to improve the compatibility of data acquired with different EEG platforms, and used to examine testāretest reliability for the three electrophysiological measures selected for a multisite projectāEstablishing Moderators and Biosignatures of Antidepressant Response for Clinical Care (EMBARC). Thirtyānine healthy controls across four clinical research sites were tested in two sessions separated by about 1 week. Resting EEG (eyesāopen and eyesāclosed conditions) was recorded and LDAEP measured using binaural tones (1000 Hz, 40 ms) at five intensities (60ā100 dB SPL). Principal components analysis of current source density waveforms reduced volume conduction and provided referenceāfree measures of resting EEG alpha and N1 dipole activity to tones from auditory cortex. Lowāresolution electromagnetic tomography (LORETA) extracted resting theta current density measures corresponding to rostral anterior cingulate (rACC), which has been implicated in treatment response. There were no significant differences in posterior alpha, N1 dipole, or rACC theta across sessions. Testāretest reliability was .84 for alpha, .87 for N1 dipole, and .70 for theta rACC current density. The demonstration of goodātoāexcellent reliability for these measures provides a template for future EEG/ERP studies from multiple testing sites, and an important step for evaluating them as biomarkers for predicting treatment response.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/135271/1/psyp12758_am.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/135271/2/psyp12758.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/135271/3/psyp12758-sup-0001-suppinfo1.pd
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Resting EEG Measures Of Brain Arousal In A Multisite Study Of Major Depression
Several studies have found upregulated brain arousal during 15-minute EEG recordings at rest in depressed patients. However, studies based on shorter EEG recording intervals are lacking. Here we aimed to compare measures of brain arousal obtained from 2-minute EEGs at rest under eyes-closed condition in depressed patients and healthy controls in a multisite projectāEstablishing Moderators and Biosignatures of Antidepressant Response for Clinical Care (EMBARC). We expected that depressed patients would show stable and elevated brain arousal relative to controls. Eighty-seven depressed patients and 36 healthy controls from four research sites in the United States were included in the analyses. The Vigilance Algorithm Leipzig (VIGALL) was used for the fully automatic classification of EEG-vigilance stages (indicating arousal states) of 1-second EEG segments; VIGALL-derived measures of brain arousal were calculated. We found that depressed patients scored higher on arousal stability (Z = ā2.163, P = .015) and A stages (dominant alpha activity; P = .027) but lower on B1 stages (low-voltage non-alpha activity, P = .008) compared with healthy controls. No significant group differences were observed in Stage B2/3. In summary, we were able to demonstrate stable and elevated brain arousal during brief 2-minute recordings at rest in depressed patients. Results set the stage for examining the value of these measures for predicting clinical response to antidepressants in the entire EMBARC sample and evaluating whether an upregulated brain arousal is particularly characteristic for responders to antidepressants
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Pretreatment Rostral Anterior Cingulate Cortex Theta Activity In Relation To Symptom Improvement In Depression: A Randomized Clinical Trial
OBJECTIVE To determine whether increased pretreatment rACC theta activity would predict symptom improvement regardless of randomization arm. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS A multicenter randomized clinical trial enrolled outpatients without psychosis and with chronic or recurrent MDD between July 29, 2011, and December 15, 2015 (Establishing Moderators and Biosignatures of Antidepressant Response for Clinical Care [EMBARC]). Patients were consecutively recruited from 4 university hospitals: 634 patients were screened, 296 were randomized to receive sertraline hydrochloride or placebo, 266 had electroencephalographic (EEG) recordings, and 248 had usable EEG data. Resting EEG data were recorded at baseline and 1 week after trial onset, and rACC theta activity was extracted using source localization. Intent-to-treat analysis was conducted. Data analysis was performed from October 7, 2016, to January 19, 2018. INTERVENTIONS An 8-week course of sertraline or placebo. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES The 17-item Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression score (assessed at baseline and weeks 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, and 8). RESULTS The 248 participants (160 [64.5%] women, 88 [35.5%] men) with usable EEG data had a mean (SD) age of 36.75 (13.15) years. Higher rACC theta activity at both baseline (b=ā1.05; 95% CI, ā1.77 to ā0.34; P = .004) and week 1 (b=ā0.83; 95% CI, ā1.60 to ā0.06; P < .04) predicted greater depressive symptom improvement, even when controlling for clinical and demographic variables previously linked with treatment outcome. These effects were not moderated by treatment arm. The rACC theta marker, in combination with clinical and demographic variables, accounted for an estimated 39.6% of the variance in symptom change (with 8.5% of the variance uniquely attributable to the rACC theta marker). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE Increased pretreatment rACC theta activity represents a nonspecific prognostic marker of treatment outcome. This is the first study to date to demonstrate that rACC theta activity has incremental predictive validity
Identification of emotion in a dichotic listening task: event-related brain potential and behavioral findings
The lateralization of emotion perception has been examined using stimuli in both auditory and visual modalities. Studies using dichotic stimuli have generally supported the hypothesis of right-hemisphere dominance for emotion perception, whereas studies of facial and verbal emotion perception have provided evidence for the right-hemisphere and valence hypotheses. A dichotic target detection task was developed to enable acquisition of event-related potentials (ERP) from subjects engaged in emotion detection. Nonsense syllables (e.g., ba, pa) stated in seven different emotional intonations were dichotically presented to 24 young adults, in a target detection task during four separate blocks (target emotions: happiness, interest, anger, or sadness). Accuracy and reaction time and ERP measures were also collected. ERPs were recorded from 14 scalp electrodes with a nose reference and quantified for N100, sustained negativity, late positivity, and slow wave. Significantly greater left-than right-ear accuracy was obtained for the identification of target prosodic emotion. Hemispheric asymmetries of N100 and sustained negativity This study is based on a doctoral dissertation conducted by the first author for Queens College and the Graduate School of the City University of New York. Partial support was provided by National Institutes of Mental Health Grants MH36295 (GB) and MH42172 ( JB). We are grateful to Drs. H. Ehrlichman, R. Johnson, and H. Sackeim for their insightful comments as members of the dissertation committee; to Dr. J. Towey for his contributions and support; to Dr. J. Welkowitz for consultation regarding aspects of methodology; to Dr. L. K. Obler for access to equipment during the stimulus development phase; and to D. Schechter for access to the normal subject pool at the New York State Psychiatric Institute. Address were found, with left-hemisphere amplitudes greater than right-hemisphere amplitudes. These ERP asymmetries were not significantly correlated with the left-ear dichotic advantage and may be related more to early phonetic processing than to emotion perception. Since the behavioral evidence supports the right-hemisphere hypothesis for emotion perception, behavioral and ERP asymmetries evident in this task reflect separable patterns of brain lateralization
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Grandchildren At High And Low Risk For Depression Differ In Eeg Measures Of Regional Brain Asymmetry
Background: Electrophysiologic studies have found abnormalities of alpha asymmetry in depressed adults and offspring of depressed parents, which have been hypothesized to be vulnerability markers of depression. Resting electroencephalogram (EEG) was measured in grandchildren participating in a multigenerational high-risk study. Methods: Electroencephalogram from 12 electrodes at six homologous sites over each hemisphere (digitally linked-ears reference) was compared in right-handed grandchildren in three groups: 1) both parent and grandparent having major depressive disorder (MDD; n Ļ 19); 2) either parent or grandparent having MDD (n Ļ 14); and 3) neither having MDD (n Ļ 16). Results: Grandchildren with both depressed parent and grandparent showed greater alpha asymmetry, with relatively less right than left hemisphere activity, when compared with those with neither depressed parent nor grandparent. This difference was present over the parietal region in the eyes-closed condition. Grandchildren having either depressed parent or grandparent also tended to show heightened alpha asymmetry at parietal sites, but they did not differ signiļ¬cantly from those with neither depressed parent nor grandparent. Low-risk grandchildren with neither depressed parent nor grandparent showed no signiļ¬cant alpha asymmetry. Conclusions: High-risk grandchildren displayed a parietal alpha asymmetry similar to that seen in adolescents or adults having a MDD and in second-generation offspring of parents concordant for MDD. Its presence in high-risk offspring and grandchildren without a lifetime history of MDD supports the hypothesis that an alpha asymmetry indicative of relatively less right than left parietal activity is an endophenotypic marker of vulnerability to a familial form of major depression