Detecting slow narrowband modulation in EEG signals

J Neurosci Methods. 2022 Aug 1:378:109660. doi: 10.1016/j.jneumeth.2022.109660. Epub 2022 Jun 30.

Abstract

Background: We observed an unusual modulatory phenomenon in the electroencephalogram (EEG) of pediatric patients with acquired brain injury. The modulation is orders of magnitude slower than the fast EEG background activity, necessitating new analysis procedures to systematically detect and quantify the phenomenon.

New method: We propose a method for analyzing spatial and temporal relationships associated with slow, narrowband modulation of EEG. We extract envelope signals from physiological frequency bands of EEG. Then, we construct a sparse representation of the spectral content of the envelope signal across sliding windows. For the latter, we use an augmented LASSO regression to incorporate spatial and temporal filtering into the solution. The method can be applied to windows of variable length, depending on the desired frequency resolution.

Results: The sparse estimates of the envelope power spectra enable the detection of narrowband modulation in the millihertz frequency range. Subsequently, we are able to assess non-stationarity in the frequency and spatial relationships across channels. The method can be paired with unsupervised anomaly detection to identify windows with significant modulation. We validated such findings by applying our method to a control set of EEGs.

Comparison with existing methods: To our knowledge, no methods have been previously proposed to quantify second order modulation at such disparate time-scales.

Conclusions: We provide a general EEG analysis framework capable of detecting signal content below 0.1 Hz, which is especially germane to clinical recordings that may contain multiple hours worth of continuous data.

Keywords: EEG modulation; Slow oscillations.

Publication types

  • Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.
  • Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural

MeSH terms

  • Child
  • Electroencephalography* / methods
  • Humans