| Literature DB >> 25750605 |
Jun Ying1, Dan Zhou2, Ke Lin3, Xiaorong Gao3.
Abstract
The auditory steady-state response (ASSR) may reflect activity from different regions of the brain. Particularly, it was reported that the gamma-band ASSR plays an important role in working memory, speech understanding, and recognition. Traditionally, the ASSR has been determined by power spectral density analysis, which cannot detect the exact overall distributed properties of the ASSR. Functional network analysis has recently been applied in electroencephalography studies. Previous studies on resting or working state found a small-world organization of the brain network. Some researchers have studied dysfunctional networks caused by diseases. The present study investigates the brain connection networks of schizophrenia patients with auditory hallucinations during an ASSR task. A directed transfer function is utilized to estimate the brain connectivity patterns. Moreover, the structures of brain networks are analyzed by converting the connectivity matrices into graphs. It is found that for normal subjects, network connections are mainly distributed at the central and frontal-temporal regions. This indicates that the central regions act as transmission hubs of information under ASSR stimulation. For patients, network connections seem unordered. The finding that the path length was larger in patients compared to that in normal subjects under most thresholds provides insight into the structures of connectivity patterns. The results suggest that there are more synchronous oscillations that cover a long distance on the cortex but a less efficient network for patients with auditory hallucinations.Entities:
Keywords: Auditory hallucinations; Auditory steady-state response (ASSR); Directed transfer function (DTF); Functional connectivity; Graph theory
Year: 2015 PMID: 25750605 PMCID: PMC4342529 DOI: 10.1007/s40846-015-0004-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Biol Eng ISSN: 1609-0985 Impact factor: 1.553
Fig. 1Positions of 30 channels used for EEG acquisition
Fig. 2DTF matrices for a SZ patients and b normal subjects. The color of the squares indicates the connection strength between i and j. DTF matrix of normal subjects is lighter than that of SZ patients, indicating that normal subjects have more powerful brain functional connections than those of SZ patients
Fig. 3Average PSDA mappings and brain connectivity patterns. For the connectivity patterns, each edge of a connection is represented by curves with arrows that link one channel (source node) to another (sink node). The color and size of the curves indicate the strength normalization level of functional connectivity between channels
Fig. 4a Cp and b Lp values obtained for normal subjects and SZ patients. Filled dots indicate the original value and solid lines denote the polynomial fitting results (inverted filled triangle represents the statistically significant difference (p < 0.05); inverted open triangle represents the no statistically significant difference)