Title: ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHIC (EEG) COHERENCE STUDY OF WORKING MEMORY BRAIN OSCILLATIONS
1ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHIC (EEG) COHERENCE
STUDY OF WORKING MEMORY BRAIN OSCILLATIONS
- Dr. Simon Brežan
- Institute of Clinical Neurophysiology,
- University Medical Centre Ljubljana, Ljubljana,
Slovenia - coauthors Vita Štukovnik, Veronika Rutar, Jurij
Dreo, Vito Logar, Blaž Koritnik, Grega Repovš,
Blaž Konec, Janez Zidar - INTERNATIONAL NEUROSCIENCE CONFERENCE, SINAPSA,
LJUBLJANA 2005
2WORKING MEMORY (WM)
- memory processes encoding, storage, recall
- memory structure sensory memory (attention)gt
short-term memory (rehearsal/replacement)gt
long-term memory - active role of short term memory working
memory- central for intelligent goal-directed
behaviour, coherent thoughts, language etc. - DEFINITION complex of cognitive processes for
time- and capacity- limited maintenance,
manipulation and utilization of mental
representations
3MODEL OF WORKING MEMORY (BADDELEY, 2000)
- central executive (CE) attentional control of
subsystems, manipulation of information,
planning, strategy selection, inhibition - slave subsystems
- phonological loop 2 separated components
storage and rehearsal of verbal information - visuospatial sketchpad separated storage and
rehearsal of visual and spatial information - episodic buffer integration of information from
other subsystems and episodic long-term memory
4NEUROPHYSIOLOGICAL AND NEUROANATOMICAL BASIS OF
WORKING MEMORY
- NEUROPHYSIOLOGICAL VIEW
- basic neurophysiological mechanism of WM
repeated reverberations of electrical impulses in
reverberational (feedback) loops (Štrucl, 1999)? - repeated excitation of a synapse in excitational
loopgt increase of excitatory postsynaptic
potential (EPSP) postsynaptic facilitation. - postsinaptic facilitation preservation/maintenan
ce of specific information in WM? - role of active repeating?
5- NEUROANATOMICAL VIEW
- Cell electrophysiological and functional brain
imaging studies (Fletcher and Henson, 2001, etc.) - various components of working memory different
anatomically separated neuronal networks - specific brain activity
- (pre)frontal (VLFC, DLFC, AFC) cortex
- premotor cortex
- limbic cortex and other subcortical structures
- posterior association parietal areas
- hypothetical lateralization of functions (Postle
et al., 2000) - verbal information (phonological loop) left
hemisphere - visuospatial information (visuospatial
sketchpad) right hemisphere - central executive heteromodal association cortex
of (pre)frontal brain regions (Gathercole, 1999)?
6BINDING PROBLEM
- BINDING PROBLEM The mechanisms for functional
integration (binding) of different brain areas,
responsible for specific (WM) functions? - Paralell and distributed processing of
information in the brain - Functional integration - coupling (visual
perception, complex motor patterns, visuo-motor
integration, cognitive functions) key for
understanding brain functioning - The code for functional coupling synchronised
oscillations of neuronal networks between
anatomically separated brain areas? - Measure of synchronised brain oscillations EEG
coherence -
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8ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY (EEG), SIGNAL ANALYSIS
EEG COHERENCE AND POWER SPECTRA
- EEG repeated, periodic electrical activity of
(pyramidal) cortical neurons - activity of many neurons (synaptic EPSPs, IPSPs)
ionic currentsgt field potentials, macropotential
(EEG signal) - intrinsic qualities of neurons, dynamic
interactions between neuronal networks- changing
pattern of synchronization and desynchronization
of regional brain cells- amplitude changes of
specific frequency bands. - EEG - great time resolution (milisec), distinct
patterns of activity - brain rhythms, frequency bands for oscillations
(delta 0,5-4 Hz, theta 4-7 Hz,
alpha 8-13 Hz, beta 13-30 Hz, gamma 30-50 Hz) - specific functional, behavioral, spatial
correlates- switching neural networks between
different functional states- activating or
inhibiting neural systems?
9EEG COHERENCE AND POWER SPECTRA
- POWER SPECTRUM - degree of representation (power)
of specific frequency band in the signal basic
input data for coherence calculation - gt different levels of regional cortical activity
or different level of regional synchronization-act
ivation or inhibition of neural networks - EEG COHERENCE measure of degree of similarity,
phase-locking (synchronization) of 2 distant
signals for specific frequency band -
- gt different degrees of long-range
synchronization of oscillations between separate
cortical regions for specific frequency band -
-
- measure of functional coupling binding and
communication between separated brain centers -
- 2 different operational systems of the brain
10Cxy(?) coherence value between signals x and y
- Fxy(?)- value of cross-correlation power spectrum
of signals x, y - Fxx(?)- value of auto-correlation power spectrum
of signal x - Fyy(?)- value of auto-correlation power spectrum
of signal y -
11WORKING MEMORY AND SYNCHRONIZED BRAIN
OSCILLATIONS POWER SPECTRA AND EEG COHERENCE
STUDIES
- synchronous oscillations- correlation with
specific behavioural contexts and cognitive tasks
numerous studies - The neurophysiological theory of (working)
memory - Brain oscillations in different frequency bands
subserve specific (memory) functions and operate
over different spatial scales. - Multiple superimposed synchronized (coherent)
oscillations in different frequency bands with
different spatial patterns and functional
correlates govern specific mental functions. -
12EEG WORKING MEMORY STUDIES
- EEG COHERENCE changes
- increases mainly in theta, alpha and gamma band
(working memory processes) (Serrien et al., 2003
Sauseng et al., 2004 Sarnthein et al, 1998
Jensen et al., 2002, etc.) - changes of power spectra and coherence with
different memory load (Gevins et al., 1997,
Jensen, 2000, etc.) - POWER SPECTRA changes
- decrease in lower alpha band (non-specific effect
of attention, mental effort) (Klimesch et al.,
1998, etc.) - decrease in upper alpha band (correlate of
semantic processing) (Basar et al., 2000, etc.) - or increase in alpha band (active inhibition of
disturbing neural networks not needed for the
memory task) (Klimesch et al., 1998, etc.) - increase in theta band frontal midline theta
rhythm (memory maintenance, attention, mental
effort) (Klimesch et al. Gevins et al. 1997,
etc.,) - increase in gamma band (sensory, perceptional,
attentional, working memory processes) (Jensen,
2000 Babiloni et al., 2004, etc.)
13SPATIAL SCALES OF COHERENCE CHANGES IN WM TASKS
- MAINLY (PRE)FRONTO- TEMPORO- PARIETAL INCREASES
OF THETA, ALPHA COHERENCE - MAINLY FRONTOCENTRAL INCREASES OF THETA AND GAMMA
OSCILLATIONS- POWER SPECTRUM INCREASES (FRONTAL
MIDLINE THETA RHYTHM) THETA SOURCE?? - ? IN ACCORDANCE WITH BADDELEYS MODEL OF WM
SEPARATE SYSTEMS FOR STORAGE (POSTERIOR) AND
ACTIVE MAINTENANCE, UPDATING OF INFORMATION
(FRONTAL BRAIN AREAS) in modal specific
subsystems - NEED FOR INFORMATION EXCHANGE, COOPERATION,
FUNCTIONAL COUPLING BETWEEN ANTERIOR AND
POSTERIOR BRAIN REGIONS - LONG RANGE- SLOW RHYTHMS, SHORT RANGE- FAST
RHYTHMS - TOP-DOWN CONTROL- CENTRAL EXECUTIVE
14OUR STUDY OF WORKING MEMORY AND BRAIN OSCILLATIONS
- AIM
- To examine the neurophysiological mechanisms of
working memory processes - To investigate task-related coherence (and power
spectra) changes for different EEG frequencies
during the processes of working memory -
- Search for possible differences in coherence (and
power spectra) changes between maintenance and
manipulation processes in working memory. - HYPOTHESES
- Increases in fronto-posterior coherence in
working memory tasks - Increases in bilateral (pre)frontal coherence for
manipulation vs. maintenance-only processes of
working memory (prefrontal central executive?)
15METHODS
- PARTICIPANTS
- 11 healthy right-handed volunteers (4 males, 7
females) informed consent, aged between 20-35 - average number of set repetition per each
task/person 38 - 10 min training of paradigm before recording
- EEG RECORDING
- Dark quiet room, projection of different tasks on
computer screen- cca. 80 cm from the eyes - EEG cap (E1-S Electro-Cap) - 29 electrodes,
standard 10-20 International electrode system
with extra electrodes Fp1, Fp2, Fz, FCz, Cz,
CPz, Pz impedance below 5kO - EEG aparat Medelec (Profile Multimedia EEG
System, version 2.0, Oxford Instruments Medical
Systems Division, Surrey, England) - EOG measurement (6 additional eye electrodes,
Croft 2000)- 20 min calibration task - Synchroniztation signal between 2 computers
- Presentation software for paradigm programming
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17- COGNITIVE WM PARADIGM
- Modified Sternberg paradigm of working memory
- CONTROL 2 EXPERIMENTAL CONDITIONS
- alternating the type of task coincidentaly
during recording sessions! - WAIT control task with no memory demands
(ignore the set, fixate the cross, relax) - TASK matching the serial position of goal
stimulus with simultaneosly presented set of
letters - SET (M, D, O) TASK instruction (WAIT)
FIXATION (5500ms) GOAL (3 D)
ANSWER (NO) - ANALYSIS! SET (M D O)
- MEMORIZE rehearsal (retention) of information
in WM - TASK matching the serial position of goal
stimulus with rehearsed originally presented set
18DATA ANALYSIS
- Special independent computer programmes were
designed for coherence and power spectra
analysis - Borland Delphi 7.0 (with EOG artefact correction-
modified Croft correction procedure) and Matlab
software (no EOG correction) - .edf conversion of EEG recordings
- Analysis of 5500ms retention/fixation periods in
all 3 types of tasks, selection of artefact-free
epochs
19Borland Delphi 7.0 data analysis
- Our analytical procedure
- Measuring EEG volatage and recording them in .EDF
files - Correcting EEG voltages with the RAAA EOG
correction method - Dividing the 5 secod retention periods for all
sets of every task into five 1 second periods. - Transforming the time-domain EEG signal of all
five 1 second periods into a frequency-domain
signal via a Fast Fourier Transform alghoritm. - Averaging the frequency-domain EEG signals for
all five 1 second periods for every set of every
task to obtain the Average-frequency-domain
signal for that set of that task for each person. - Calculating Power-Spectra and Coherence for every
set of every task for each person. - Averaging of Power-Spectra and Coherence for
every task from all the sets in that task for
every person. Thus obtaining the Average-task PS
and C for every person. - Averaging of Power-Spectra and Coherence for all
persons for every task Thus obtaining the
Average-person PS and C. - Averaging the Power-Spectra and Coherence in the
desired frequency bands. Thus obtaining the
Average-band PS and C that are displayed in our
results. - Optionally comparing Average-band PS and C for
two different tasks.
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21Statistical analysis
- To calculate the border coherence-difference
values that are significant at desired p-levels
we created from 50.000 to 100.000 (depending on
the frequency band) randomly distributed
simulated EEG measurements that fit our
experimental design exactly - a total of 11 people, 4 with 56 sets per person,
7 with 28 sets of one task per person - per each set an average of five 1 second
retention periods - a 1 Hz resolution in the Fourier transform
- From these simulations we obtained a sampling
distribution curve that fits our experiment
design as accurately as possible. The
border-coherence values that are significant at
desired p-levels were then estimated through a
two-tailed t-test by calculating the area under
the sampling distribution curve that fits the
desired p-level. - FB 1 Delta (1-4 Hz), Theta (4-7 Hz), Alpha 1
(7-10 Hz), Alpha 2 (10-13 Hz) - FB 2 Beta (13-30 Hz)
- FB 3 Gamma (3050 Hz)
Border coherence-difference values at desired p-levels for different frequency bands Border coherence-difference values at desired p-levels for different frequency bands Border coherence-difference values at desired p-levels for different frequency bands Border coherence-difference values at desired p-levels for different frequency bands
p-level Coh. diff. FB 1 Coh. diff. FB 2 Coh. diff. FB 3
lt 0.5 gt 0.0186 gt 0.0091 gt 0.008
lt 0.1 gt 0.0452 gt 0.0221 gt 0.020
lt 0.05 gt 0.0542 gt 0.0263 gt 0.022
lt 0.01 gt 0.0722 gt 0.0348 gt 0.030
22RESULTS
- Increases and decreases of coherence for
different frequency bands with differences
between 3 tasks will be showed only for
statistical significance p lt 0.1 FOR ALL IMAGES - New schematic model of the head with coherence
value TASK DIFFERENCES presented - Colour scale
- warm colours- coherence increases between
electrodes - cold colours- coherence decreases between
electrodes
23COHERENCE CHANGESMEMORIZE VS. WAIT (CONTROL)
TASK (P lt 0.1)
- ALPHA 1
- EXPLAINATION OF SCHEME!
- (Pre)fronto-central
- fronto-parietal
- fronto-occipital increases
- Interhemispheric bitemporal increases
- Temporo- parietal increases
24MEMORIZE VS. WAIT
- ALPHA 2
- Fronto-central increases
- interhemispheric frontotemporal increases
- fronto-parieto-occipital increases
- Temporo-parietal increases
25MEMORIZE VS. WAIT
- GAMMA
- Less intensive increases, dominant
- fronto-parietal
- fronto-temporal
- fronto-central increases
26MEMORIZE VS. WAIT
- THETA
- Fronto- central increases
- Fronto- occipital increases
- Interhemispheric bitemporal increases
- Frontotemporo-parietooccipital increases
27REORDER VS. WAIT
- ALPHA 1
- (pre)fronto-centro-parietal increases
- temporo- central
- interhemisheric bitemporal
- parieto-occipital increases
28REORDER VS. WAIT
- ALPHA 2
- Prefronto-central increases
- Fronto-centro-parietal
- Fronto-temporal
- Centro-temporal
- Interhemispheric bitemporal
- Temporo-occipital
29REORDER VS. WAIT
- GAMMA
- Less intensive but
- simmilar pattern of coherence increases
30REORDER VS. WAIT
- THETA
- Fronto-central
- Fronto-parietal
- Frontotemporo-occipital increases
31REORDER VS. MEMORIZE
- ALPHA 1
- Centro-temporal increase
- Occipito-temporal increase
- Decreases of coherence
32REORDER VS. MEMORIZE
- ALPHA 2
- Fronto-central
- Fronto-temporo-parietal
- Parieto-occipital increases
- Interhemispheric bitemporal increases
- Decreases of coherence
33REORDER VS. MEMORIZE
- GAMMA
- Less intensive increases
- Prefronto-centro-parieto-occipital axis increases
34REORDER VS. MEMORIZE
- THETA
- Mainly
- (Pre)fronto-parietooccipital axis increases
35ADDITIONAL DATA ANAYLSIS AND DIFFERENT WAY OF
DATA PRESENTATION
- //MATLAB SOFTWARE (no EOG correction)
- The influence of EOG correction procedures on EEG
coherence? - gtgtSIMMILAR TRENDS IN COHERENCE VALUES
Memorise vs. wait task THETA coherence changes
36- Reorder vs. wait task
- THETA coherence changes
37Reorder vs. memorize task THETA coherence changes
38SUMMARY OF RESULTS
- WM TASKS COHERENCE INCREASES MAINLY IN ALPHA 2,
ALPHA 1, THETA (AND ALSO GAMMA) FREQUENCY BANDS - FOR MEMORIZE (WM MAINTENANCE) VS. WAIT (CONTROL)
TASK - FOR REORDER (WM MANIPULATION) VS. WAIT (CONTROL)
- SPATIAL SCALES OF INCREASES MAINLY
FRONTO-POSTERIOR, FRONTOTEMPORAL, BITEMPORAL
LONG- RANGE CONNECTIONS IN THE BRAIN - REORDER (WM MANIPULATION) VS. MEMORIZE
(MAINTENANCE-ONLY) COHERENCE INCREASES MAINLY IN
ALPHA2 AND THETA BAND - SPATIAL SCALESALSO ANTERIO-POSTERIOR BRAIN AXIS,
BITEMPORAL INTERHEMISPHERICALLY, BUT
NO (PRE)FRONTAL INTERHEMISHERIC INCREASES - DECREASES OF COHERENCE OTHER AREAS
39INTERPRETATION OF RESULTS
- Greatest coherence (synchronization) increases
-retention WM periods in ALPHA AND THETA (and
gamma) frequency bands - widespread fronto-parietal association brain
areas involved- in accordance with other studies
and Baddeleys model of WM! - temporal interhemispheric connections?
- Different EEG frequencies appear to have
different functional correlates? - LIJ (Lisman, Idiart, Jensen, 1998) WM MODEL!!!
- The increased theta coherence -working memory
processes (storage, rehearsal and scanning) - Alpha band directly involved in memory processes
or reflects increased mental effort, attention?
Role not known yet, results contradictive in
different studies - Gamma band is believed to be correlated with
sensory processing and the very content of
information processing, but could also reflect
increased attentiveness.
40- The neuronal synchronization (increased
coherence) functional coupling - role in interaction of posterior association
cortex (where sensory information is stored), and
(pre)frontal cortex, where relevant current
information is held, rehearsed and updated
(Baddeleys model, phonological loop) - Decreases of coherence functional decoupling of
disturbing processes, selective attention?
- LATERALIZATION?
- Verbal memory tasks seem to activate primarly
left brain hemisphere, but visuospatial memory
tasks activate predominantly right brain
hemisphere- we didnt demonstrate significant
lateralization patterns! - possible reasons?volume conduction, low spatial
resolution, visuospatial strategies
41Manipulation- CE function
- We found increases of coherence in fronto-
parietal loops also compared to memorize only - Central executive also demands funtional
integration of anterio-posterior neural circuits-
brain regions and not primarily prefrontal
interhemispheric communication? - Role of interhemispheric connections in temporal
brain regions (alpha 2- semantic memory?)
42LIJ NEUROPHYSIOLOGICAL MODEL OF WORKING MEMORY
(Lisman, Idiart and Jensen, 1998)
- Figure --. Concept of LIJ working memory model.
-
- Three memory items (A, B, C) are loaded in
memory buffer, the theta period increases by one
gamma period with each item added. In retention
interval (delay period), items are maintained by
activity-dependent intrinsic properties of the
neurons coding these items. After probe
presentation the items can be scanned compared
with the probe as they are activated. After
scanning, motor response and answer can be
initiated. RT reaction time
43- Figure --. LIJ model as a multi-item short-term
memory buffer. - Theta and gamma oscillations play an important
role in the concept. An afterdepolarization (ADP)
is triggered after a cell fires (sensory input)
and it causes depolarizing ramp that serves to
trigger the same cell to fire again after delay.
These ramps are temporarily offset for different
memories, an offset that causes different
memories to fire in different gamma cycles. The
key function of this buffer is to perpetuate the
firing of cells in a way that retains serial
order. The repeat time is determined by theta
oscillations due to external input. Gamma
oscillations arise from alternating global
feedback inhibition and excitation (the cell with
most depolarized ramp will fire again) because of
separate firing of different memory codes.
44DISCUSSION CRITICAL APPROACH
- BETTER STATISTICAL SIGNIFICANCE?- PROBLEM OF
CONTROL- WAIT TASK (absolute coherence values!)
spontaneous non-intentional memory set
repetition?- encoding before instruction
inhibitory instruction context (WM?), working
space preparation resting state correlated
networks? - PROBLEM OF VOLUME CONDUCTION- electrical charge
flowgt voltage/ signal masking effect - INFLUENCE OF EOG CORRECTION PROCEDURE?
- LOW SPATIAL RESOLUTION IN EEG, occipital-parietal
transfer of signal, interhemispherically?
NO LATERALIZATION IN VERBAL
TASK? - ELECTROMAGNETIC INFLUENCES, OTHER ARTEFACTS-
SIGNAL TO NOISE RATIO
45FUTURE PERSPECTIVES
- LAPLACE CORRECTION (Nunez) FOR VOLUME
CONDUCTION - ADDITION OF NEW PURELY SENSORY-PERCEPTIVE
CONTROL TASK - ELECTRODE POSITIONING DETERMINATION
- HIGHER SAMPLING RATE
- choosing appropriate cognitive paradigms and
neuropsychological tests- possible to study
physiological and patophysiological aspects of
cognitive, motor and sensory brain function!!! - new future perspectives for possible search of
patophysiological mechanisms and etiological
factors contributing to many different
neurological diseases!
46MAIN REFERENCES
- Baddeley, A. (2000). The episodic buffer a new
component of working memory? Trends in cognitive
science, 4(11), 417-423. - Jensen O, Tesche CD (2002). Frontal theta
activity in humans increases with memory load in
a working memory task.. Eur J Neurosci.
200215(8)1395-9. - Jensen, O. in Lisman, J.E. (1998). An oscillatory
short-term memory buffer model can account for
data on the Sternberg task. The journal of
neuroscience, 18(24), 10688-10699. - Babiloni, C., Carducci, F., Vecchio, F., Rossi,
S., Babiloni, F., Cincotti, F., Cola, B.,
Miniussi, C. in Rossini, P.M. (2004). Functional
frontoparietal connectivity during short-term
memory as revealed by high resolution EEG
coherence analysis. Behavioral neurosciencies,
118(4), 687-697. - Klimesch W. Memory processes, brain oscillations
and EEG synchronization. Internal journal of
psychophysiology (1996) 24 6-100. - Klimesch, W., Doppelmayr, M., Schwaiger, P.
Auinger in Winkler, Th. (1999). Paradoxical
alpha synchonisation in memory task. Cognitive
brain research, 7, 493-501. - Sarnthein, J., Petsche, H., Rappelsberger, P.,
Shaw, G.L. in von Stein, A. (1998).
Synchronization between prefrontal and posterior
association cortex during human working memory.
Neurobiology, 95, 7092-7096. - Sauseng, P., Klimesch W., Doppelmayr, M.,
Hanslmayr, S., Schabus, M. in Gruber, W.R.
(2004). Theta coupling in the human
electroencephalogram during a working memory
task. Neuroscience letters, 354, 123-126. - Serrien, D.J., Pogosyan A.H. in Brown, P. (2003).
Influence of working memory on patterns of motor
related cortico-cortical coupling. Experimental
brain research. Dostopno na spletni strani - Stam, C.J., van Cappellen van Walsum, A.M. in
Micheloyannis, S. (2002). Variability of EEG
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psychophysiology, 46, 53-66.
47ABSOLUTE VALUES OF THETA COHERENCE-WAIT VS.
MEMORIZE TASK
48ABSOLUTE VALUES OF THETA COHERENCE- WAIT VS.
REORDER TASK