4.5 Article

Human Brain Networks in Physiological Aging: A Graph Theoretical Analysis of Cortical Connectivity from EEG Data

Journal

JOURNAL OF ALZHEIMERS DISEASE
Volume 41, Issue 4, Pages 1239-1249

Publisher

IOS PRESS
DOI: 10.3233/JAD-140090

Keywords

Delta and alpha bands; EEG; eLORETA; functional connectivity; graph theory; small-world networks

Categories

Funding

  1. Italian Ministry of Instruction, University and Research MIUR

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Modern analysis of electroencephalographic (EEG) rhythms provides information on dynamic brain connectivity. To test the hypothesis that aging processes modulate the brain connectivity network, EEG recording was conducted on 113 healthy volunteers. They were divided into three groups in accordance with their ages: 36 Young (15-45 years), 46 Adult (50-70 years), and 31 Elderly (>70 years). To evaluate the stability of the investigated parameters, a subgroup of 10 subjects underwent a second EEG recording two weeks later. Graph theory functions were applied to the undirected and weighted networks obtained by the lagged linear coherence evaluated by eLORETA on cortical sources. EEG frequency bands of interest were: delta (2-4 Hz), theta (4-8 Hz), alpha1 (8-10.5 Hz), alpha2 (10.5-13 Hz), beta1 (13-20 Hz), beta2 (20-30 Hz), and gamma (30-40 Hz). The spectral connectivity analysis of cortical sources showed that the normalized Characteristic Path Length (.) presented the pattern Young>Adult>Elderly in the higher alpha band. Elderly also showed a greater increase in delta and theta bands than Young. The correlation between age and lambda showed that higher ages corresponded to higher lambda in delta and theta and lower in the alpha2 band; this pattern reflects the age-related modulation of higher (alpha) and decreased (delta) connectivity. The Normalized Clustering coefficient (gamma) and small-world network modeling (sigma) showed non-significant age-modulation. Evidence from the present study suggests that graph theory can aid in the analysis of connectivity patterns estimated from EEG and can facilitate the study of the physiological and pathological brain aging features of functional connectivity networks.

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