| Literature DB >> 27596927 |
Elma O'Sullivan-Greene1, Levin Kuhlmann1,2, Ewan S Nurse1,3,4, Dean R Freestone1,3,4, David B Grayden1, Mark Cook3,4, Anthony Burkitt1, Iven Mareels1.
Abstract
The expansion of frontiers in neural engineering is dependent on the ability to track, detect and predict dynamics in neural tissue. Recent innovations to elucidate information from electrical recordings of brain dynamics, such as epileptic seizure prediction, have involved switching to an active probing paradigm using electrically evoked recordings rather than traditional passive measurements. This paper positions the advantage of probing in terms of information extraction, by using a coupled oscillator Kuramoto model to represent brain dynamics. While active probing performs better at observing underlying system synchrony in Kuramoto networks, especially in non-Gaussian measurement environments, the benefits diminish with increasing relative size of electrode spatial resolution compared to synchrony area. This suggests probing will be useful for improved characterization of synchrony for suitably dense electrode recordings.Entities:
Keywords: Epileptic seizure prediction; Kuramoto model; brain network observability; neural synchrony
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27596927 DOI: 10.1142/S0129065716500386
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Neural Syst ISSN: 0129-0657 Impact factor: 5.866