Spatiotemporal signal space separation for regions of interest: Application for extracting neuromagnetic responses evoked by deep brain stimulation

Author:

Oswal Ashwini1234ORCID,Abdi‐Sargezeh Bahman12ORCID,Sharma Abhinav12,Özkurt Tolga Esat5,Taulu Samu67,Sarangmat Nagaraja4,Green Alexander L.2,Litvak Vladimir3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. MRC Brain Network Dynamics Unit University of Oxford Oxford UK

2. Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences University of Oxford Oxford UK

3. The Wellcome Centre for Human Neuroimaging University College London London UK

4. Department of Neurology John Radcliffe Hospital Oxford UK

5. Graduate School of Informatics Middle East Technical University Ankara Turkey

6. Department of Physics University of Washington Seattle Washington USA

7. Institute for Learning and Brain Sciences University of Washington Seattle Washington USA

Abstract

AbstractMagnetoencephalography (MEG) recordings are often contaminated by interference that can exceed the amplitude of physiological brain activity by several orders of magnitude. Furthermore, the activity of interference sources may spatially extend (known as source leakage) into the activity of brain signals of interest, resulting in source estimation inaccuracies. This problem is particularly apparent when using MEG to interrogate the effects of brain stimulation on large‐scale cortical networks. In this technical report, we develop a novel denoising approach for suppressing the leakage of interference source activity into the activity representing a brain region of interest. This approach leverages spatial and temporal domain projectors for signal arising from prespecified anatomical regions of interest. We apply this denoising approach to reconstruct simulated evoked response topographies to deep brain stimulation (DBS) in a phantom recording. We highlight the advantages of our approach compared to the benchmark—spatiotemporal signal space separation—and show that it can more accurately reveal brain stimulation‐evoked response topographies. Finally, we apply our method to MEG recordings from a single patient with Parkinson's disease, to reveal early cortical‐evoked responses to DBS of the subthalamic nucleus.

Funder

Medical Research Council

Wellcome Trust

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Neurology (clinical),Neurology,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging,Radiological and Ultrasound Technology,Anatomy

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