4.5 Article

Multivariate multiscale entropy (mMSE) as a tool for understanding the resting-state EEG signal dynamics: the spatial distribution and sex/gender-related differences

Journal

BEHAVIORAL AND BRAIN FUNCTIONS
Volume 19, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12993-023-00218-7

Keywords

Resting-state networks; EEG; Multivariate multiscale entropy; EEG complexity; EEG dynamics

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This study aimed to investigate the changes in complexity of resting-state EEG over time and space. The study used multivariate Multiscale Entropy (mMSE) to analyze the rsEEG complexity and examine its sex/gender differences in 95 healthy adults. The results showed that the channel sets corresponding to the somatomotor, dorsolateral network, and default mode had the highest complexity, while the visual network, limbic network, and frontoparietal network had the lowest complexity. Women showed higher complexity change and differences in entropy at different scales compared to men.
Background The study aimed to determine how the resting-state EEG (rsEEG) complexity changes both over time and space (channels). The complexity of rsEEG and its sex/gender differences were examined using the multivariate Multiscale Entropy (mMSE) in 95 healthy adults. Following the probability maps (Giacometti et al. in J Neurosci Methods 229:84-96, 2014), channel sets have been identified that correspond to the functional networks. For each channel set the area under curve (AUC), which represents the total complexity, MaxSlope-the maximum complexity change of the EEG signal at thefine scales (1:4 timescales), and AvgEnt-to the average entropy level at coarse-grained scales (9:12 timescales), respectively, were extracted. To check dynamic changes between the entropy level at the fine and coarse-grained scales, the difference in mMSE between the #9 and #4 timescale (DiffEnt) was also calculated.Results We found the highest AUC for the channel sets corresponding to the somatomotor (SMN), dorsolateral network (DAN) and default mode (DMN) whereas the visual network (VN), limbic (LN), and frontoparietal (FPN) network showed the lowest AUC. The largest MaxSlope were in the SMN, DMN, ventral attention network (VAN), LN and FPN, and the smallest in the VN. The SMN and DAN were characterized by the highest and the LN, FPN, and VN by the lowest AvgEnt. The most stable entropy were for the DAN and VN while the LN showed the greatest drop of entropy at the coarse scales. Women, compared to men, showed higher MaxSlope and DiffEnt but lower AvgEnt in all channel sets.Conclusions Novel results of the present study are: (1) an identification of the mMSE features that capture entropy at the fine and coarse timescales in the channel sets corresponding to the main resting-state networks; (2) the sex/gender differences in these features.

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