| Literature DB >> 35782087 |
Tahnia Nazneen1, Iffath Binta Islam1, Md Sakibur Rahman Sajal1,2, Wasifa Jamal3, M Ashraful Amin4, Ravi Vaidyanathan5, Tom Chau6, Khondaker A Mamun1,2.
Abstract
The study of brain-to-brain synchrony has a burgeoning application in the brain-computer interface (BCI) research, offering valuable insights into the neural underpinnings of interacting human brains using numerous neural recording technologies. The area allows exploring the commonality of brain dynamics by evaluating the neural synchronization among a group of people performing a specified task. The growing number of publications on brain-to-brain synchrony inspired the authors to conduct a systematic review using the PRISMA protocol so that future researchers can get a comprehensive understanding of the paradigms, methodologies, translational algorithms, and challenges in the area of brain-to-brain synchrony research. This review has gone through a systematic search with a specified search string and selected some articles based on pre-specified eligibility criteria. The findings from the review revealed that most of the articles have followed the social psychology paradigm, while 36% of the selected studies have an application in cognitive neuroscience. The most applied approach to determine neural connectivity is a coherence measure utilizing phase-locking value (PLV) in the EEG studies, followed by wavelet transform coherence (WTC) in all of the fNIRS studies. While most of the experiments have control experiments as a part of their setup, a small number implemented algorithmic control, and only one study had interventional or a stimulus-induced control experiment to limit spurious synchronization. Hence, to the best of the authors' knowledge, this systematic review solely contributes to critically evaluating the scopes and technological advances of brain-to-brain synchrony to allow this discipline to produce more effective research outcomes in the remote future.Entities:
Keywords: behavioral cognition; brain dynamics; brain-to-brain synchrony; interbrain synchrony; neuroscience; psychology; synchrony measure
Year: 2022 PMID: 35782087 PMCID: PMC9245014 DOI: 10.3389/fncom.2022.875282
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Comput Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5188 Impact factor: 3.387
Research questions (RQs) addressed in the systematic review.
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| RQ1 | What domains are explored in the analysis of brain-to-brain synchrony in the selected studies? | The domain of neuroscience and psychological paradigm has been explored to define the field of study and experimental design for measuring brain-to-brain synchrony, along with assigned tasks and significant outcomes of the studies. | This is an exhaustive question seeking to explore the entire scope of brain-to-brain synchrony research. An overarching study of its domains will help future researchers group their studies and design newer paradigms. |
| RQ2 | What modalities are used to collect neural signals from the brain and why? | The types of neural signals (EEG/MEG, fMRI, fNIRS, etc.) and the respected devices to collect this neural signal are tabulated. The reason for choosing the respected neural signal has also been described. | This is the most important aspect when analyzing and correlating studies with the environmental setting and neural synchrony measure. |
| RQ3 | What neural synchrony measures are used? | The preprocessing method, connectivity measure, behavioral and neural correlation, and directional measures are extracted and analyzed. | The methods or indices that are used for measuring brain-to-brain synchrony can give the researchers an insight into the evolution and current limitation of the algorithms. |
| RQ4 | What internal and external factors have influenced the inter-bain synchrony? | This brings into light the study of spurious synchronization and current limitations in measurement techniques | The details and methods to differentiate spurious synchrony from true synchrony can guide future researchers in designing more robust control and interventional experiments. |
Searching Strategy from the databases with a multidisciplinary perspective.
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| Google scholar | “brain-to-brain” OR neural OR interbrain AND synchron* OR coupling OR hyperscan* | 300 | Cross-disciplinary perspective |
| Pubmed | (“brain-to-brain” OR neural OR interbrain OR hyperscan*) AND (synchron* OR coupling) | 136 | Medical perspective |
| Science direct | “brain-to-brain” OR neural OR interbrain AND synchron* OR coupling | 261 | Cross-disciplinary perspective |
| IEEE Xplore | “brain-to-brain” OR neural OR interbrain AND synchron* OR coupling | 9 | Electrical/electronic engineering Perspective |
| Web of science | “brain-to-brain” OR neural OR interbrain AND synchron* OR coupling | 199 | Cross-disciplinary perspective |
| bioRxiv | “brain-to-brain” OR neural OR interbrain AND synchron* OR coupling | 86 | Neuroscience and physiology perspective |
| Total = 991 |
Inclusion and exclusion criteria of the systematic review.
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| Literatures that have been published from 2011 to 2020. Studies having an experimental paradigm in naturalistic or laboratory settings. Studies published only in the English language are included. Accepted manuscripts and pre-print versions of studies are also eligible for inclusion criteria. | Therapeutic studies, review articles, book chapters are excluded from this study. Studies using animals for experimental paradigms have been excluded. Clinical patients (participants with any health issue or mental disorder) and clinical research are also excluded from this article. |
Figure 1Flow chart for selection of studies maintaining Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis Protocol (PRISMA-P) protocol.
Extracted data items for the selected articles.
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| Origin of articles | Type of paper | The publication of studies as an article of journal or conference paper or in the repository of electronic preprint. |
| Country of Affiliation of the first author | The location of the affiliated institute, university, or research lab of the first author | |
| Year | The year of publication of the article | |
| Domain | Experimental Paradigm | Experimental design followed by the study in terms of participants' role. |
| Environment | Whether or not the study was conducted in a naturalistic or laboratory environment | |
| Tasks | The list of tasks were given to the participants whose associated neural synchrony was measured | |
| Field of study | Primary area of study of the selected experiment or study | |
| Data acquisition | Modality | Whether the signal derivation was based on electrical, hemodynamic, or blood flow activity of the brain |
| Hardware | If the type of hardware used in the study was research-grade or commercial-grade | |
| Neural signal processing | Preprocessing | Set of manipulation steps applied to the raw data to remove artifact and noise |
| Synchrony measure | Synchrony measures that were used to measure the synchrony index | |
| Control condition | Induced Synchrony | Whether or not there was a procedure in place to eliminate the possibility of synchrony due to shared stimuli perception, if so, which |
| Coincidence synchrony | Whether or not there was a procedure in place to rule out the possibility of coincidental synchrony, if so, which | |
| Outcomes | Behavior and synchrony | Dynamic effect of the mutual task on human brain signal |
| Activated brain region | The brain regions that were activated in the selected studies | |
| Synchronized frequency | The frequency level at which the interbrain synchronization signified true information flow among brains | |
| Reproducibility | Dataset | Whether the data used for the experiment has a publicly available dataset or not, and if so, where |
| Code | Whether the code used for the experiment is available online or not, and if so, where |
Figure 2A number of studies conducted in different countries according to first author affiliation.
Figure 3A number of studies published per year per domain.
Figure 4Number of fields of study under each paradigm.
Figure 5Different modalities used for the acquisition of brain signals distributed across domains.
Selected studies on the dimensions of this review.
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| Educational psychology | Affective neuroscience | Naturalistic | fNIRS, Actigraph | Wavelet transform coherence | Pan et al. ( |
| Laboratory | fNIRS | Wavelet transform coherence | Zheng et al. ( | ||
| Granger causality | Zheng et al. ( | ||||
| Cognitive neuroscience | Naturalistic | EEG | Correlated component analysis | Poulsen et al. ( | |
| Semi-naturalistic | EEG | Total interdependence | Dikker et al. ( | ||
| Circular Correlation | Davidesco et al. ( | ||||
| Laboratory | fMRI | Inter-subject Correlation | Nguyen et al. ( | ||
| Systems neuroscience | Naturalistic | fNIRS | Wavelet transform coherence | Pan et al. ( | |
| Music psychology | Cognitive neuroscience | Naturalistic | EEG | Correlated component analysis | Madsen et al. ( |
| Inter-subject correlation | Kaneshiro et al. ( | ||||
| Phase synchronization index | Poikonen et al. ( | ||||
| Laboratory | fMRI | Pearson correlation | Abrams et al. ( | ||
| Inter-subject correlation | Fasano et al. ( | ||||
| Systems neuroscience | Naturalistic | EEG | Graph theory | Müller et al. ( | |
| Interbrain Phase Coherence | Sänger et al. ( | ||||
| Phase locking index | Sänger et al. ( | ||||
| Phase synchrony index | Sänger et al. ( | ||||
| Semi-naturalistic | EEG | Graph theory | Viktor et al. ( | ||
| Laboratory | EEG | Amplitude envelope correlation | Zamm et al. ( | ||
| Psycholinguistics | Behavioral neuroscience | Naturalistic | EEG | Partial directed coherence | Leong et al. ( |
| Phase-locking value | Leong et al. ( | ||||
| Granger causality | Leong et al. ( | ||||
| fNIRS | Wavelet transform coherence | Nguyen et al. ( | |||
| Laboratory | EEG-MEG | Phase lag index | Ahn et al. ( | ||
| Cognitive neuroscience | Naturalistic | EEG | Circular correlation | Pérez et al. ( | |
| Semi-naturalistic | EEG | Cross correlation analysis | Kawasaki et al. ( | ||
| fNIRS | Inter-subject correlation | Piazza et al. ( | |||
| Laboratory | EEG | Coarse-graining markov-chain | Reiterer et al. ( | ||
| Phase-lag index | Reiterer et al. ( | ||||
| Systems neuroscience | Laboratory | fNIRS-fMRI | General linear model | Liu et al. ( | |
| fMRI | Inter-subject correlation | Dikker et al. ( | |||
| Social psychology | Affective neuroscience | Naturalistic | EEG | Circular correlation | Goldstein et al. ( |
| Inter-subject correlation | Ding et al. ( | ||||
| Pearson correlation | Dikker et al. ( | ||||
| Phase-locking value | Ding et al. ( | ||||
| Spearman correlation | Kinreich et al. ( | ||||
| Laboratory | fMRI | Instantaneous intersubject phase synchronization | Nummenmaa et al. ( | ||
| Behavioral neuroscience | Naturalistic | EEG | Partial correlation | Szymanski et al. ( | |
| Partial directed coherence | Santamaria et al. ( | ||||
| Phase-locking value | Jahng et al. ( | ||||
| Yun et al. ( | |||||
| Phase lag index | Szymanski et al. ( | ||||
| Granger-gewek causality | Shehata et al. ( | ||||
| Graph theory | Santamaria et al. ( | ||||
| fNIRS | Wavelet transform coherence | Jiang et al. ( | |||
| Granger causality | Jiang et al. ( | ||||
| Semi-naturalistic | EEG | Phase-locking value | Hu et al. ( | ||
| Laboratory | EEG | Phase synchronization index | Kawasaki et al. ( | ||
| MEG | Phase-locking value | Hirata et al. ( | |||
| Granger causality | Hirata et al. ( | ||||
| Partial directed coherence | Hirata et al. ( | ||||
| fNIRS | Wavelet transform coherence | Reindl et al. ( | |||
| fMRI | Correlation component analysis | Koike et al. ( | |||
| Cognitive neuroscience | Naturalistic | EEG | Phase-locking value | Antonenko et al. ( | |
| Phase Slope Index | Fenwick et al. ( | ||||
| Total Interdependence | Reinero et al. ( | ||||
| fNIRS | Wavelet transform coherence | Liu et al. ( | |||
| Semi-naturalistic | fNIRS | Wavelet transform coherence | Nozawa et al. ( | ||
| Laboratory | fNIRS | Wavelet transform coherence | Xue et al. ( | ||
| Systems neuroscience | Naturalistic | EEG | Phase-locking value | Hachmeister et al. ( | |
| Laboratory | EEG | Circular correlation | Novembre et al. ( | ||
| fMRI | Inter-subject correlation | Gao et al. ( |
Characteristics of different synchrony measures.
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| Linear | X | X | |||
| Non-linear | X | ||||
| Info-based | X | X | |||
| Data-driven | X | X | X | X | X |
| Causality assessing | X | X | |||
| Multivariate | X | ||||
| Stationary independent | X | X | |||
| Functional connectivity | X | X | X | X | X |
| Effective connectivity | X | X |