4.7 Article

Differential classification of states of consciousness using envelope- and phase-based functional connectivity

期刊

NEUROIMAGE
卷 237, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2021.118171

关键词

Electroencephalography; Consciousness; Connectivity; Network; Anesthesia; Machine learning

资金

  1. James S. McDonnell Foundation, St. Louis, MO
  2. Canadian Institute for Health Research [FRN 152562]
  3. Fonds de Recherche du Quebec - Nature et technologies
  4. Natural Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada [RGPIN 2016-03817]

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The study compared the performance of envelope-based AEC and phase-based wPLI in classifying states of consciousness, showing that AEC is better suited to detect relative alterations in brain functional connectivity across levels of anesthetic-induced unconsciousness.
The development of sophisticated computational tools to quantify changes in the brain's oscillatory dynamics across states of consciousness have included both envelope- and phase-based measures of functional connectivity (FC), but there are very few direct comparisons of these techniques using the same dataset. The goal of this study was to compare an envelope-based (i.e. Amplitude Envelope Correlation, AEC) and a phase-based (i.e. weighted Phase Lag Index, wPLI) measure of FC in their classification of states of consciousness. Nine healthy participants underwent a three-hour experimental anesthetic protocol with propofol induction and isoflurane maintenance, in which five minutes of 128-channel electroencephalography were recorded before, during, and after anestheticinduced unconsciousness, at the following time points: Baseline; light sedation with propofol (Light Sedation); deep unconsciousness following three hours of surgical levels of anesthesia with isoflurane (Unconscious); five minutes prior to the recovery of consciousness (Pre-ROC); and three hours following the recovery of consciousness (Recovery). Support vector machine classification was applied to the source-localized EEG in the alpha (8-13 Hz) frequency band in order to investigate the ability of AEC and wPLI (separately and together) to discriminate i) the four states from Baseline; ii) Unconscious (deep unconsciousness) vs. Pre-ROC (light unconsciousness); and iii) responsiveness (Baseline, Light Sedation, Recovery) vs. unresponsiveness (Unconscious, Pre-ROC). AEC and wPLI yielded different patterns of global connectivity across states of consciousness, with AEC showing the strongest network connectivity during the Unconscious epoch, and wPLI showing the strongest connectivity during full consciousness (i.e., Baseline and Recovery). Both measures also demonstrated differential predictive contributions across participants and used different brain regions for classification. AEC showed higher classification accuracy overall, particularly for distinguishing anesthetic-induced unconsciousness from Baseline (83.7 +/- 0.8%). AEC also showed stronger classification accuracy than wPLI when distinguishing Unconscious from Pre-ROC (i.e., deep from light unconsciousness) (AEC: 66.3 +/- 1.2%; wPLI: 56.2 +/- 1.3%), and when distinguishing between responsiveness and unresponsiveness (AEC: 76.0 +/- 1.3%; wPLI: 63.6 +/- 1.8%). Classification accuracy was not improved compared to AEC when both AEC and wPLI were combined. This analysis of source-localized EEG data demonstrates that envelope- and phase-based FC provide different information about states of consciousness but that, on a group level, AEC is better able to detect relative alterations in brain FC across levels of anesthetic-induced unconsciousness compared to wPLI.

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