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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

ERF and scale-free analyses of source-reconstructed MEG brain signals during a multisensory learning paradigm

Zilber, Nicolas 10 March 2014 (has links) (PDF)
The analysis of Human brain activity in magnetoencephalography (MEG) can be generally conducted in two ways: either by focusing on the average response evoked by a stimulus repeated over time, more commonly known as an ''event-related field'' (ERF), or by decomposing the signal into functionally relevant oscillatory or frequency bands (such as alpha, beta or gamma). However, the major part of brain activity is arrhythmic and these approaches fail in describing its complexity, particularly in resting-state. As an alternative, the analysis of the 1/f-type power spectrum observed in the very low frequencies, a hallmark of scale-free dynamics, can overcome these issues. Yet it remains unclear whether this scale-free property is functionally relevant and whether its fluctuations matter for behavior. To address this question, our first concern was to establish a visual learning paradigm that would entail functional plasticity during an MEG session. In order to optimize the training effects, we developed new audiovisual (AV) stimuli (an acoustic texture paired with a colored visual motion) that induced multisensory integration and indeed improved learning compared to visual training solely (V) or accompanied with acoustic noise (AVn). This led us to investigate the neural correlates of these three types of training using first a classical method such as the ERF analysis. After source reconstruction on each individual cortical surface using MNE-dSPM, the network involved in the task was identified at the group-level. The selective plasticity observed in the human motion area (hMT+) correlated across all individuals with the behavioral improvement and was supported by a larger network in AV comprising multisensory areas. On the basis of these findings, we further explored the links between the behavior and scale-free properties of these same source-reconstructed MEG signals. Although most studies restricted their analysis to the global measure of self-similarity (i.e. long-range fluctuations), we also considered local fluctuations (i.e. multifractality) by using the Wavelet Leader Based Multifractal Formalism (WLBMF). We found intertwined modulations of self-similarity and multifractality in the same cortical regions as those revealed by the ERF analysis. Most astonishing, the degree of multifractality observed in each individual converged during the training towards a single attractor that reflected the asymptotic behavioral performance in hMT+. Finally, these findings and their associated methodological issues are compared with the ones that came out from the ERF analysis.
2

ERF and scale-free analyses of source-reconstructed MEG brain signals during a multisensory learning paradigm / Analyses des champs évoqués et de l’invariance d’échelle des signaux cérébraux acquis en magnétoencéphalographie durant un paradigme d’apprentissage multisensoriel et reconstruits sur la surface corticale

Zilber, Nicolas 10 March 2014 (has links)
Il existe deux façons d'analyser l'activité cérébrale acquise en magnétoencéphalographie (MEG) : soit en moyennant les réponses suscitées par la répétition d'un stimulus afin d'observer le « champ évoqué »; soit en décomposant le signal en bandes oscillatoires (tel que l'alpha, le bêta ou le gamma), chacune étant associée à différents rôles fonctionnels. Ces méthodes ne prennent cependant pas compte de la complexité de l'activité cérébrale dont l'essentiel est arythmique, notamment au repos. Pour pallier à cela, une autre approche consiste à analyser le spectre de puissance en 1/f observable dans les très basses fréquences, une caractéristique des systèmes dont la dynamique est invariante d'échelle. Pour savoir si cette propriété joue un quelconque rôle dans le fonctionnement cérébral et si elle a des conséquences sur le comportement, nous avons établit un paradigme d'apprentissage visuel permettant d'observer de la plasticité fonctionnelle au cours d'une session MEG. Pour avoir un entraînement optimal, nous avons développé de nouveaux stimuli audiovisuels (AV) (une texture acoustique associée à un nuage de points colorés en mouvement) permettant une intégration multisensorielle et de ce fait un meilleur apprentissage que celui apporté par un entraînement visuel seul (V) ou accompagné d'un bruit acoustique (AVn). Nous avons ensuite étudié les corrélats neuronaux de ces trois types d'apprentissage par l'analyse classique des champs évoqués. Une fois l'activité reconstruite sur la surface corticale de chaque individu à l'aide de MNE-dSPM, nous avons identifié le réseau impliqué dans la tâche au sein de chaque groupe. En particulier, la plasticité sélective observée dans l'aire hMT+ associée au traitement du mouvement visuel corrélait avec les progressions comportementales des individus et était soutenue en AV par un plus vaste réseau comprenant notamment des aires multisensorielles. Parallèlement, nous avons exploré les liens reliant le comportement et les propriétés d'invariance d'échelle de ces mêmes signaux MEG reconstruits sur le cortex. Tandis que la plupart des études se limitent à analyser l'auto-similarité (une caractéristique globale synonyme de longue mémoire), nous avons aussi considéré les fluctuations locales (c-à-d la multifractalité) au moyen de l'analyse WLBMF. Nous avons trouvé des modulations couplées de l'auto-similarité et de la multifractalité dans des régions similaires à celles révélées par l'analyse des champs évoqués. Plus surprenant, Le degré de multifractalité relevé dans chaque individu convergeait durant l'entraînement vers un même attracteur reflétant la performance comportementale asymptotique. / The analysis of Human brain activity in magnetoencephalography (MEG) can be generally conducted in two ways: either by focusing on the average response evoked by a stimulus repeated over time, more commonly known as an ``event-related field'' (ERF), or by decomposing the signal into functionally relevant oscillatory or frequency bands (such as alpha, beta or gamma). However, the major part of brain activity is arrhythmic and these approaches fail in describing its complexity, particularly in resting-state. As an alternative, the analysis of the 1/f-type power spectrum observed in the very low frequencies, a hallmark of scale-free dynamics, can overcome these issues. Yet it remains unclear whether this scale-free property is functionally relevant and whether its fluctuations matter for behavior. To address this question, our first concern was to establish a visual learning paradigm that would entail functional plasticity during an MEG session. In order to optimize the training effects, we developed new audiovisual (AV) stimuli (an acoustic texture paired with a colored visual motion) that induced multisensory integration and indeed improved learning compared to visual training solely (V) or accompanied with acoustic noise (AVn). This led us to investigate the neural correlates of these three types of training using first a classical method such as the ERF analysis. After source reconstruction on each individual cortical surface using MNE-dSPM, the network involved in the task was identified at the group-level. The selective plasticity observed in the human motion area (hMT+) correlated across all individuals with the behavioral improvement and was supported by a larger network in AV comprising multisensory areas. On the basis of these findings, we further explored the links between the behavior and scale-free properties of these same source-reconstructed MEG signals. Although most studies restricted their analysis to the global measure of self-similarity (i.e. long-range fluctuations), we also considered local fluctuations (i.e. multifractality) by using the Wavelet Leader Based Multifractal Formalism (WLBMF). We found intertwined modulations of self-similarity and multifractality in the same cortical regions as those revealed by the ERF analysis. Most astonishing, the degree of multifractality observed in each individual converged during the training towards a single attractor that reflected the asymptotic behavioral performance in hMT+. Finally, these findings and their associated methodological issues are compared with the ones that came out from the ERF analysis.

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