Objective: During EEG the discharge of TMS generates a long-lasting decay artefact (DA) that makes the analysis of TMS-evoked potentials (TEPs) difficult. Our aim was twofold: (1) to describe how the DA affects the recorded EEG and (2) to develop a new adaptive detrend algorithm (ADA) able to correct the DA. Methods: We performed two experiments testing 50 healthy volunteers. In experiment 1, we tested the efficacy of ADA by comparing it with two commonly-used independent component analysis (ICA) algorithms. In experiment 2, we further investigated the efficiency of ADA and the impact of the DA evoked from TMS over frontal, motor and parietal areas. Results: Our results demonstrated that (1) the DA affected the EEG signal in the spatiotemporal domain; (2) ADA was able to completely remove the DA without affecting the TEP waveforms; (3). ICA corrections produced significant changes in peak-to-peak TEP amplitude. Conclusions: ADA is a reliable solution for the DA correction, especially considering that (1) it does not affect physiological responses; (2) it is completely data-driven and (3) its effectiveness does not depend on the characteristics of the artefact and on the number of recording electrodes. Significance: We proposed a new reliable algorithm of correction for long-lasting TMS-EEG artifacts.

Casula, E.p., Bertoldo, A., Tarantino, V., Maiella, M., Koch, G., Rothwell, J.c., et al. (2017). TMS-evoked long-lasting artefacts: a new adaptive algorithm for EEG signal correction. CLINICAL NEUROPHYSIOLOGY, 128(9), 1563-1574 [10.1016/j.clinph.2017.06.003].

TMS-evoked long-lasting artefacts: a new adaptive algorithm for EEG signal correction

Casula, E. P.;Maiella, M.;Koch, G.;
2017-01-01

Abstract

Objective: During EEG the discharge of TMS generates a long-lasting decay artefact (DA) that makes the analysis of TMS-evoked potentials (TEPs) difficult. Our aim was twofold: (1) to describe how the DA affects the recorded EEG and (2) to develop a new adaptive detrend algorithm (ADA) able to correct the DA. Methods: We performed two experiments testing 50 healthy volunteers. In experiment 1, we tested the efficacy of ADA by comparing it with two commonly-used independent component analysis (ICA) algorithms. In experiment 2, we further investigated the efficiency of ADA and the impact of the DA evoked from TMS over frontal, motor and parietal areas. Results: Our results demonstrated that (1) the DA affected the EEG signal in the spatiotemporal domain; (2) ADA was able to completely remove the DA without affecting the TEP waveforms; (3). ICA corrections produced significant changes in peak-to-peak TEP amplitude. Conclusions: ADA is a reliable solution for the DA correction, especially considering that (1) it does not affect physiological responses; (2) it is completely data-driven and (3) its effectiveness does not depend on the characteristics of the artefact and on the number of recording electrodes. Significance: We proposed a new reliable algorithm of correction for long-lasting TMS-EEG artifacts.
2017
Pubblicato
Rilevanza internazionale
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Settore M-PSI/02 - Psicobiologia e Psicologia Fisiologica
Settore PSIC-01/B - Neuropsicologia e neuroscienze cognitive
English
Artefact
Detrend
EEG
ICA
TMS
Casula, E.p., Bertoldo, A., Tarantino, V., Maiella, M., Koch, G., Rothwell, J.c., et al. (2017). TMS-evoked long-lasting artefacts: a new adaptive algorithm for EEG signal correction. CLINICAL NEUROPHYSIOLOGY, 128(9), 1563-1574 [10.1016/j.clinph.2017.06.003].
Casula, Ep; Bertoldo, A; Tarantino, V; Maiella, M; Koch, G; Rothwell, Jc; Toffolo, Gm; Bisiacchi, Ps
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2108/388162
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