TY - JOUR
T1 - Phase-amplitude markers of synchrony and noise
T2 - A resting-state and TMS-EEG study of schizophrenia
AU - Freche, D
AU - Naim-Feil, J
AU - Hess, S
AU - Peled, A
AU - Grinshpoon, A
AU - Moses, E
AU - Levit-Binnun, N
N1 - NLB is supported by the Israel Science Foundation under Grant No. 1169/11, by the National Institute of Psychobiology in Israel, and by the Sagol Foundation (Israel). EM is supported by the Israel Science Foundation under Grant No. 1385/16, by the Minerva Foundation (Germany), and by the Clore Center for Biological Physics (Israel).
PY - 2020/5/4
Y1 - 2020/5/4
N2 - The electroencephalogram (EEG) of schizophrenia patients is known to exhibit a reduction of signal-to-noise ratio and of phase locking, as well as a facilitation of excitability, in response to a variety of external stimuli. Here we demonstrate these effects in transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS)-evoked potentials and in the resting-state EEG. To ensure veracity we used three weekly sessions and analyzed both resting state and TMS-EEG data. For the TMS responses our analysis verifies known results. For the resting state we introduce the methodology of mean-normalized variation to the EEG analysis (quartile-based coefficient of variation), which allows for a comparison of narrow-band EEG amplitude fluctuations to narrow-band Gaussian noise. This reveals that amplitude fluctuations in the delta, alpha and beta bands of healthy controls are different from those in schizophrenia patients, on time scales of tens of seconds. We conclude that the EEG-measured cortical activity patterns of schizophrenia patients are more similar to noise, both in alpha and beta resting state and in TMS responses. Our results suggest that the ability of neuronal populations to form stable, locally and temporally correlated activity is reduced in schizophrenia, a conclusion that is in accord with previous experiments on TMS-EEG and on resting-state EEG.
AB - The electroencephalogram (EEG) of schizophrenia patients is known to exhibit a reduction of signal-to-noise ratio and of phase locking, as well as a facilitation of excitability, in response to a variety of external stimuli. Here we demonstrate these effects in transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS)-evoked potentials and in the resting-state EEG. To ensure veracity we used three weekly sessions and analyzed both resting state and TMS-EEG data. For the TMS responses our analysis verifies known results. For the resting state we introduce the methodology of mean-normalized variation to the EEG analysis (quartile-based coefficient of variation), which allows for a comparison of narrow-band EEG amplitude fluctuations to narrow-band Gaussian noise. This reveals that amplitude fluctuations in the delta, alpha and beta bands of healthy controls are different from those in schizophrenia patients, on time scales of tens of seconds. We conclude that the EEG-measured cortical activity patterns of schizophrenia patients are more similar to noise, both in alpha and beta resting state and in TMS responses. Our results suggest that the ability of neuronal populations to form stable, locally and temporally correlated activity is reduced in schizophrenia, a conclusion that is in accord with previous experiments on TMS-EEG and on resting-state EEG.
U2 - 10.1093/texcom/tgaa013
DO - 10.1093/texcom/tgaa013
M3 - مقالة
SN - 2632-7376
JO - Cerebral Cortex Communications
JF - Cerebral Cortex Communications
M1 - tgaa013
ER -