The importance of decomposing periodic and aperiodic EEG signals for assessment of brain function in a global context

Author:

Del Bianco Teresa1ORCID,Haartsen Rianne1,Mason Luke12,Leno Virginia Carter3,Springer Cilla4,Potter Mandy5,Mackay Wendy5,Smit Petrusa5,Plessis Carlie Du5,Brink Lucy5,Johnson Mark H.16,Murphy Declan2,Loth Eva2,Odendaal Hein5,Jones Emily J. H.1

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Brain and Cognitive Development Birkbeck University of London London UK

2. Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience King's College, London London UK

3. Department of Biostatistics and Health Informatics, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience King's College London London UK

4. Department of Paediatrics and Child Health Stellenbosch University Cape Town South Africa

5. Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology Stellenbosch University Cape Town South Africa

6. Department of Psychology University of Cambridge Cambridge UK

Abstract

AbstractMeasures of early neuro‐cognitive development that are suitable for use in low‐resource settings are needed to enable studies of the effects of early adversity on the developing brain in a global context. These measures should have high acquisition rates and good face and construct validity. Here, we investigated the feasibility of a naturalistic electroencephalography (EEG) paradigm in a low‐resource context during childhood. Additionally, we examined the sensitivity of periodic and aperiodic EEG metrics to social and non‐social stimuli. We recorded simultaneous 20‐channel EEG and eye‐tracking in 72 children aged 4–12 years (45 females) while they watched videos of women singing nursery rhymes and moving toys, selected to represent familiar childhood experiences. These measures were part of a feasibility study that assessed the feasibility and acceptability of a follow‐up data collection of the South African Safe Passage Study, which tracks environmental adversity and brain and cognitive development from before birth up until childhood. We examined whether data quantity and quality varied with child characteristics and the sensitivity of varying EEG metrics (canonical band power in the theta and alpha band and periodic and aperiodic features of the power spectra). We found that children who completed the EEG and eye‐tracking assessment were, in general, representative of the full cohort. Data quantity was higher in children with greater visual attention to the stimuli. Out of the tested EEG metrics, periodic measures in the theta frequency range were most sensitive to condition differences, compared to alpha range measures and canonical and aperiodic EEG measures. Our results show that measuring EEG during ecologically valid social and non‐social stimuli is feasible in low‐resource settings, is feasible for most children, and produces robust indices of social brain function. This work provides preliminary support for testing longitudinal links between social brain function, environmental factors, and emerging behaviors.

Publisher

Wiley

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