4.7 Article

Anticipated synchronization in human EEG data: Unidirectional causality with negative phase lag

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW E
Volume 102, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevE.102.032216

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. CNPq [432429/2016-6, 425329/2018-6, 301744/2018-1]
  2. CAPES [88881.120309/2016-01, 23038.003382/2018-39]
  3. FACEPE [APQ-0642-1.05/18, APQ-08261.05/15]
  4. FAPEAL
  5. UFAL
  6. UFPE
  7. Research, Innovation and Dissemination Center for Neuromathematics (S. Paulo Research Foundation FAPESP) [2013/07699-0]

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Understanding the functional connectivity of the brain has become a major goal of neuroscience. In many situations the relative phase difference, together with coherence patterns, has been employed to infer the direction of the information flow. However, it has been recently shown in local field potential data from monkeys the existence of a synchronized regime in which unidirectionally coupled areas can present both positive and negative phase differences. During the counterintuitive regime, called anticipated synchronization (AS), the phase difference does not reflect the causality. Here we investigate coherence and causality at the alpha frequency band (f similar to 10 Hz) between pairs of electroencephalogram (EEG) electrodes in humans during a GO/NO-GO task. We show that human EEG signals can exhibit anticipated synchronization, which is characterized by a unidirectional influence from an electrode A to an electrode B, but the electrode B leads the electrode A in time. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first verification of AS in EEG signals and in the human brain. The usual delayed synchronization (DS) regime is also present between many pairs. DS is characterized by a unidirectional influence from an electrode A to an electrode B and a positive phase difference between A and B which indicates that the electrode A leads the electrode B in time. Moreover we show that EEG signals exhibit diversity in the phase relations: the pairs of electrodes can present in-phase, antiphase, or out-of-phase synchronization with a similar distribution of positive and negative phase differences.

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