Vosskuhl Johannes, Mutanen Tuomas P, Neuling Toralf, Ilmoniemi Risto J, Herrmann Christoph S
Experimental Psychology Lab, Cluster of Excellence "Hearing4all", European Medical School, University of Oldenburg, Oldenburg, Germany.
Department of Neuroscience and Biomedical Engineering, Aalto University School of Science, Espoo, Finland.
Front Hum Neurosci. 2020 Dec 18;14:536070. doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2020.536070. eCollection 2020.
To probe the functional role of brain oscillations, transcranial alternating current stimulation (tACS) has proven to be a useful neuroscientific tool. Because of the excessive tACS-caused artifact at the stimulation frequency in electroencephalography (EEG) signals, tACS + EEG studies have been mostly limited to compare brain activity between recordings before and after concurrent tACS. Critically, attempts to suppress the artifact in the data cannot assure that the entire artifact is removed while brain activity is preserved. The current study aims to evaluate the feasibility of specific artifact correction techniques to clean tACS-contaminated EEG data.
In the first experiment, we used a phantom head to have full control over the signal to be analyzed. Driving pre-recorded human brain-oscillation signals through a dipolar current source within the phantom, we simultaneously applied tACS and compared the performance of different artifact-correction techniques: sine subtraction, template subtraction, and signal-space projection (SSP). In the second experiment, we combined tACS and EEG on one human subject to demonstrate the best-performing data-correction approach in a proof of principle.
The tACS artifact was highly attenuated by SSP in the phantom and the human EEG; thus, we were able to recover the amplitude and phase of the oscillatory activity. In the human experiment, event-related desynchronization could be restored after correcting the artifact.
The best results were achieved with SSP, which outperformed sine subtraction and template subtraction.
Our results demonstrate the feasibility of SSP by applying it to a phantom measurement with pre-recorded signal and one human tACS + EEG dataset. For a full validation of SSP, more data are needed.
为探究脑振荡的功能作用,经颅交流电刺激(tACS)已被证明是一种有用的神经科学工具。由于在脑电图(EEG)信号中,tACS会在刺激频率处产生过多伪迹,tACS + EEG研究大多局限于比较同时进行tACS前后记录之间的大脑活动。关键的是,试图在数据中抑制伪迹并不能确保在保留大脑活动的同时完全去除整个伪迹。本研究旨在评估特定伪迹校正技术清理受tACS污染的EEG数据的可行性。
在第一个实验中,我们使用了一个仿真头来完全控制要分析的信号。通过在仿真头内的偶极电流源驱动预先记录的人类脑振荡信号,我们同时施加tACS,并比较了不同伪迹校正技术的性能:正弦减法、模板减法和信号空间投影(SSP)。在第二个实验中,我们在一名人类受试者身上将tACS和EEG相结合,以在原理验证中展示性能最佳的数据校正方法。
在仿真头和人类EEG中,SSP极大地衰减了tACS伪迹;因此,我们能够恢复振荡活动的幅度和相位。在人体实验中,校正伪迹后可以恢复事件相关去同步化。
SSP取得了最佳结果,其性能优于正弦减法和模板减法。
我们的结果通过将SSP应用于带有预先记录信号的仿真测量和一个人类tACS + EEG数据集,证明了其可行性。为了对SSP进行全面验证,还需要更多数据。