Novel methodology for detection and prediction of mild cognitive impairment using resting‐state EEG

Author:

Deng Jinxian1,Sun Boxin1,Kavcic Voyko23,Liu Mingyan4,Giordani Bruno56,Li Tongtong16

Affiliation:

1. Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering Michigan State University East Lansing Michigan USA

2. Institute of Gerontology Wayne State University Detroit Michigan USA

3. International Institute of Applied Gerontology Ljubljana Slovenia

4. Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science University of Michigan Ann Arbor Michigan USA

5. Departments of Psychiatry Neurology Psychology and School of Nursing University of Michigan Ann Arbor Michigan USA

6. Michigan Alzheimer's Disease Research Center Ann Arbor Michigan USA

Abstract

AbstractBACKGROUNDEarly discrimination and prediction of cognitive decline are crucial for the study of neurodegenerative mechanisms and interventions to promote cognitive resiliency.METHODSOur research is based on resting‐state electroencephalography (EEG) and the current dataset includes 137 consensus‐diagnosed, community‐dwelling Black Americans (ages 60–90 years, 84 healthy controls [HC]; 53 mild cognitive impairment [MCI]) recruited through Wayne State University and Michigan Alzheimer's Disease Research Center. We conducted multiscale analysis on time‐varying brain functional connectivity and developed an innovative soft discrimination model in which each decision on HC or MCI also comes with a connectivity‐based score.RESULTSThe leave‐one‐out cross‐validation accuracy is 91.97% and 3‐fold accuracy is 91.17%. The 9 to 18 months’ progression trend prediction accuracy over an availability‐limited subset sample is 84.61%.CONCLUSIONThe EEG‐based soft discrimination model demonstrates high sensitivity and reliability for MCI detection and shows promising capability in proactive prediction of people at risk of MCI before clinical symptoms may occur.

Funder

National Science Foundation

National Institutes of Health

Alzheimer's Association

Javna Agencija za Raziskovalno Dejavnost RS

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Geriatrics and Gerontology,Neurology (clinical),Developmental Neuroscience,Health Policy,Epidemiology

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