The relationship between EEG and fMRI connectomes is reproducible across simultaneous EEG-fMRI studies from 1.5T to 7T.

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State: Public
Version: Final published version
License: CC BY 4.0
Serval ID
serval:BIB_B225007BAD2F
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
The relationship between EEG and fMRI connectomes is reproducible across simultaneous EEG-fMRI studies from 1.5T to 7T.
Journal
NeuroImage
Author(s)
Wirsich J., Jorge J., Iannotti G.R., Shamshiri E.A., Grouiller F., Abreu R., Lazeyras F., Giraud A.L., Gruetter R., Sadaghiani S., Vulliémoz S.
ISSN
1095-9572 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
1053-8119
Publication state
Published
Issued date
01/05/2021
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
231
Pages
117864
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article ; Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
Both electroencephalography (EEG) and functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) are non-invasive methods that show complementary aspects of human brain activity. Despite measuring different proxies of brain activity, both the measured blood-oxygenation (fMRI) and neurophysiological recordings (EEG) are indirectly coupled. The electrophysiological and BOLD signal can map the underlying functional connectivity structure at the whole brain scale at different timescales. Previous work demonstrated a moderate but significant correlation between resting-state functional connectivity of both modalities, however there is a wide range of technical setups to measure simultaneous EEG-fMRI and the reliability of those measures between different setups remains unknown. This is true notably with respect to different magnetic field strengths (low and high field) and different spatial sampling of EEG (medium to high-density electrode coverage). Here, we investigated the reproducibility of the bimodal EEG-fMRI functional connectome in the most comprehensive resting-state simultaneous EEG-fMRI dataset compiled to date including a total of 72 subjects from four different imaging centers. Data was acquired from 1.5T, 3T and 7T scanners with simultaneously recorded EEG using 64 or 256 electrodes. We demonstrate that the whole-brain monomodal connectivity reproducibly correlates across different datasets and that a moderate crossmodal correlation between EEG and fMRI connectivity of r ≈ 0.3 can be reproducibly extracted in low- and high-field scanners. The crossmodal correlation was strongest in the EEG-β frequency band but exists across all frequency bands. Both homotopic and within intrinsic connectivity network (ICN) connections contributed the most to the crossmodal relationship. This study confirms, using a considerably diverse range of recording setups, that simultaneous EEG-fMRI offers a consistent estimate of multimodal functional connectomes in healthy subjects that are dominantly linked through a functional core of ICNs across spanning across the different timescales measured by EEG and fMRI. This opens new avenues for estimating the dynamics of brain function and provides a better understanding of interactions between EEG and fMRI measures. This observed level of reproducibility also defines a baseline for the study of alterations of this coupling in pathological conditions and their role as potential clinical markers.
Keywords
Adolescent, Adult, Brain/diagnostic imaging, Brain/physiology, Connectome/methods, Connectome/standards, Databases, Factual/standards, Electroencephalography/methods, Electroencephalography/standards, Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods, Magnetic Resonance Imaging/standards, Male, Middle Aged, Nerve Net/diagnostic imaging, Nerve Net/physiology, Reproducibility of Results, Young Adult
Pubmed
Web of science
Open Access
Yes
Create date
01/03/2021 14:57
Last modification date
09/01/2024 8:25
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