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Wavelet Analysis as a Tool for Investigating Movement-Related Cortical Oscillations in EEG-fMRI Coregistration
Authors:Silvia Francesca Storti  Emanuela Formaggio  Alberto Beltramello  Antonio Fiaschi  Paolo Manganotti
Institution:1.Department of Neurological and Vision Sciences, Section of Neurological rehabilitation,University of Verona,Verona,Italy;2.Policlinico “Gianbattista Rossi”,Università di Verona,Verona,Italia;3.Department of Information Engineering,University of Padova,Padova,Italy;4.Department of Neurosurgery, Section of Neuroradiology,University of Verona,Verona,Italy;5.IRCCS “San Camillo” Hospital,Venice,Italy
Abstract:Electroencephalography combined with functional magnetic resonance imaging (EEG-fMRI) identifies blood oxygenation level dependent (BOLD) signal changes associated with physiological and pathological EEG events. In this study we used EEG-fMRI to determine the possible correlation between topographical movement-related EEG changes in brain oscillatory activity recorded from EEG electrodes over the scalp and fMRI cortical responses in motor areas during finger movement. Thirty-two channels of EEG were recorded in 12 subjects during eyes-closed condition inside a three T magnetic resonance (MR) scanner using an MR-compatible EEG recording system. Off-line MRI artifact subtraction software was applied to obtain continuous EEG data during fMRI acquisition. For EEG data analysis we used a time–frequency approach to measure time by varying the energy in a signal at a given frequency band by the convolution of the EEG signal with a wavelet family in the alpha and beta bands. The correlation between the BOLD signal associated with the EEG regressor provides that sensory motor region is a source of the EEG. We conclude that combined EEG-fMRI can be used to investigate movement-related oscillations of the human brain inside an MRI scanner and wavelet analysis adds further details on the EEG changes. The movement-related changes in the EEG signals are useful to identify the brain activation sources responsible for BOLD-signal changes.
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