Real-time reduction of task-related scalp-hemodynamics artifact in functional near-infrared spectroscopy with sliding-window analysis

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Abstract

Functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) is an effective non-invasive neuroimaging technique for measuring hemoglobin concentration in the cerebral cortex. Owing to the nature of fNIRS measurement principles, measured signals can be contaminated with task-related scalp blood flow (SBF), which is distributed over the whole head and masks true brain activity. Aiming for fNIRS-based real-time application, we proposed a real-time task-related SBF artifact reduction method. Using a principal component analysis, we estimated a global temporal pattern of SBF from few short-channels, then we applied a general linear model for removing it from long-channels that were possibly contaminated by SBF. Sliding-window analysis was applied for both signal steps for real-time processing. To assess the performance, a semi-real simulation was executed with measured short-channel signals in a motor-task experiment. Compared with conventional techniques with no elements of SBF, the proposed method showed significantly higher estimation performance for true brain activation under a task-related SBF artifact environment.

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Oda, Y., Sato, T., Nambu, I., & Wada, Y. (2018). Real-time reduction of task-related scalp-hemodynamics artifact in functional near-infrared spectroscopy with sliding-window analysis. Applied Sciences (Switzerland), 8(1). https://doi.org/10.3390/APP8010149

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