| Literature DB >> 26363348 |
Jlenia Toppi1, Laura Astolfi2, Govinda R Poudel3, Carrie R H Innes4, Fabio Babiloni5, Richard D Jones6.
Abstract
An episode of complete failure to respond during an attentive task accompanied by behavioural signs of sleep is called a behavioural microsleep. We proposed a combination of high-resolution EEG and an advanced method for time-varying effective connectivity estimation for reconstructing the temporal evolution of the causal relations between cortical regions when microsleeps occur during a continuous visuomotor task. We found connectivity patterns involving left-right frontal, left-right parietal, and left-frontal/right-parietal connections commencing in the interval [-500; -250] ms prior to the onset of microsleeps and disappearing at the end of the microsleeps. Our results from global graph indices derived from effective connectivity analysis have revealed EEG-based biomarkers of all stages of microsleeps (preceding, onset, pre-recovery, recovery). In particular, this raises the possibility of being able to predict microsleeps in real-world tasks and initiate a 'wake-up' intervention to avert the microsleeps and, hence, prevent injurious and even multi-fatality accidents.Entities:
Keywords: Behavioural microsleeps; EEG; Effective connectivity; Graph theory; Time-varying connectivity
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26363348 DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2015.08.059
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuroimage ISSN: 1053-8119 Impact factor: 6.556