Cognitive Reorganization Due to Mental Workload: A Functional Connectivity Analysis Based on Working Memory Paradigms

Author:

Dimitrakopoulos Georgios N.1ORCID,Kakkos Ioannis23ORCID,Anastasiou Athanasios2ORCID,Bezerianos Anastasios4ORCID,Sun Yu56,Matsopoulos George K.2

Affiliation:

1. Bioinformatics and Human Electrophysiology Lab (BiHELab), Department of Informatics, Ionian University, 49100 Corfu, Greece

2. Biomedical Engineering Laboratory, School of Electrical and Computer Engineering, National Technical University of Athens, 15780 Athens, Greece

3. Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of West Attica, 12243 Athens, Greece

4. Hellenic Institute of Transport, Center for Research and Technology Hellas, 57001 Thessaloniki, Greece

5. Key Laboratory for Biomedical Engineering of Ministry of Education of China, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou 310027, China

6. State Key Laboratory for Brain-Computer Intelligence, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou 310027, China

Abstract

Mental workload has a major effect on the individual’s performance in most real-world tasks, which can lead to significant errors in critical operations. On this premise, the analysis and assessment of mental workload attain high research interest in both the fields of Neuroergonomics and Neuroscience. In this work, we implemented an EEG experimental design consisting of two distinct mental tasks (mental arithmetic task, n-back task), each with two conditions of complexity (low and high) to investigate the task-related and task-unrelated workload effects. Since mental workload is an intricate phenomenon involving multiple brain areas, we performed a graph theoretical analysis estimating the Phase Locking Index (PLI) in four frequency bands (delta, theta, alpha, beta). The brainwave-dependent network results show statistically significant reductions in clustering coefficient, characteristic path length, and small-worldness metrics with higher workload in both tasks across several bands. Moreover, functional connectivity analysis indicates a task-independent fashion of the brain topological re-organization with increasing mental load. These results revealed how the brain network is re-organized with increasing mental workload in a task-independent way. Finally, the network metrics were used as classification features, leading to high performance in workload level discrimination.

Funder

National University of Singapore for Cognitive Engineering Group at Singapore Institute for Neurotechnology

Ministry of Education of Singapore

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes,Computer Science Applications,Process Chemistry and Technology,General Engineering,Instrumentation,General Materials Science

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