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The effects of spatial leakage correction on the reliability of <scp>EEG</scp>‐based functional connectivity networks

Péter Nagy, Brigitta Tóth, István Winkler, Ádám Boncz

2024Human Brain Mapping16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Electroencephalography (EEG) functional connectivity (FC) estimates are confounded by the volume conduction problem. This effect can be greatly reduced by applying FC measures insensitive to instantaneous, zero-lag dependencies (corrected measures). However, numerous studies showed that FC measures sensitive to volume conduction (uncorrected measures) exhibit higher reliability and higher subject-level identifiability. We tested how source reconstruction contributed to the reliability difference of EEG FC measures on a large (n = 201) resting-state data set testing eight FC measures (including corrected and uncorrected measures). We showed that the high reliability of uncorrected FC measures in resting state partly stems from source reconstruction: idiosyncratic noise patterns define a baseline resting-state functional network that explains a significant portion of the reliability of uncorrected FC measures. This effect remained valid for template head model-based, as well as individual head model-based source reconstruction. Based on our findings we made suggestions how to best use spatial leakage corrected and uncorrected FC measures depending on the main goals of the study.

Topics & Concepts

ElectroencephalographyResting state fMRIReliability (semiconductor)IdentifiabilityPattern recognition (psychology)Functional connectivityComputer scienceStatisticsMathematicsArtificial intelligenceNeurosciencePsychologyPhysicsQuantum mechanicsPower (physics)Functional Brain Connectivity StudiesNeural dynamics and brain functionEEG and Brain-Computer Interfaces
The effects of spatial leakage correction on the reliability of <scp>EEG</scp>‐based functional connectivity networks | Litcius