EEG functional connectivity as a Riemannian mediator: An application to malnutrition and cognition

Author:

Lopez Naranjo Carlos1ORCID,Razzaq Fuleah Abdul1ORCID,Li Min12,Wang Ying1,Bosch‐Bayard Jorge F.3,Lindquist Martin A.4ORCID,Gonzalez Mitjans Anisleidy15,Garcia Ronaldo1,Rabinowitz Arielle G.5,Anderson Simon G.6,Chiarenza Giuseppe A.7,Calzada‐Reyes Ana8,Virues‐Alba Trinidad8,Galler Janina R.9,Minati Ludovico110,Bringas Vega Maria L.18,Valdes‐Sosa Pedro A.18ORCID

Affiliation:

1. The Clinical Hospital of Chengdu Brain Science Institute, MOE Key Lab for Neuroinformation, School of Life Science and Technology University of Electronic Science and Technology of China Chengdu China

2. Hangzhou Dianzi University Zhejiang Hangzhou China

3. Faculty of Psychology Autonomous University of Madrid Madrid Spain

4. Department of Biostatistics Johns Hopkins University Baltimore Maryland USA

5. Montreal Neurological Institute‐Hospital McGill University Montreal Quebec Canada

6. The George Alleyne Chronic Disease Research Centre, Caribbean Institute for Health Research University of the West Indies Cave Hill Barbados

7. Centro Internazionale Disturbi di Apprendimento, Attenzione, Iperattività (CIDAAI) Milan Italy

8. Cuban Center for Neuroscience La Habana Cuba

9. Division of Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition Massachusetts General Hospital for Children Boston Massachusetts USA

10. Center for Mind/Brain Science (CIMeC) University of Trento Trento Italy

Abstract

AbstractMediation analysis assesses whether an exposure directly produces changes in cognitive behavior or is influenced by intermediate “mediators”. Electroencephalographic (EEG) spectral measurements have been previously used as effective mediators representing diverse aspects of brain function. However, it has been necessary to collapse EEG measures onto a single scalar using standard mediation methods. In this article, we overcome this limitation and examine EEG frequency‐resolved functional connectivity measures as a mediator using the full EEG cross‐spectral tensor (CST). Since CST samples do not exist in Euclidean space but in the Riemannian manifold of positive‐definite tensors, we transform the problem, allowing for the use of classic multivariate statistics. Toward this end, we map the data from the original manifold space to the Euclidean tangent space, eliminating redundant information to conform to a “compressed CST.” The resulting object is a matrix with rows corresponding to frequencies and columns to cross spectra between channels. We have developed a novel matrix mediation approach that leverages a nuclear norm regularization to determine the matrix‐valued regression parameters. Furthermore, we introduced a global test for the overall CST mediation and a test to determine specific channels and frequencies driving the mediation. We validated the method through simulations and applied it to our well‐studied 50+‐year Barbados Nutrition Study dataset by comparing EEGs collected in school‐age children (5–11 years) who were malnourished in the first year of life with those of healthy classmate controls. We hypothesized that the CST mediates the effect of malnutrition on cognitive performance. We can now explicitly pinpoint the frequencies (delta, theta, alpha, and beta bands) and regions (frontal, central, and occipital) in which functional connectivity was altered in previously malnourished children, an improvement to prior studies. Understanding the specific networks impacted by a history of postnatal malnutrition could pave the way for developing more targeted and personalized therapeutic interventions. Our methods offer a versatile framework applicable to mediation studies encompassing matrix and Hermitian 3D tensor mediators alongside scalar exposures and outcomes, facilitating comprehensive analyses across diverse research domains.

Funder

University of Electronic Science and Technology of China

Publisher

Wiley

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