Resting EEG discrimination of early stage alzheimer's disease from normal aging using inter-channel coherence network graphs

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Abstract

Amnestic mild cognitive impairment (MCI) is a degenerative neurological disorder at the early stage of Alzheimer's disease (AD). This work is a pilot study aimed at developing a simple scalp-EEG-based method for screening and monitoring MCI and AD. Specifically, the use of graphical analysis of inter-channel coherence of resting EEG for the detection of MCI and AD at early stages is explored. Resting EEG records from 48 age-matched subjects (mean age 75.7 years)-15 normal controls (NC), 16 with early-stage MCI, and 17 with early-stage AD-are examined. Network graphs are constructed using pairwise inter-channel coherence measures for delta-theta, alpha, beta, and gamma band frequencies. Network features are computed and used in a support vector machine model to discriminate among the three groups. Leave-one-out cross-validation discrimination accuracies of 93.6% for MCI vs. NC (p < 0.0003), 93.8% for AD vs. NC (p < 0.0003), and 97.0% for MCI vs. AD (p < 0.0003) are achieved. These results suggest the potential for graphical analysis of resting EEG inter-channel coherence as an efficacious method for noninvasive screening for MCI and early AD. © 2013 Biomedical Engineering Society.

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McBride, J., Zhao, X., Munro, N., Smith, C., Jicha, G., & Jiang, Y. (2013). Resting EEG discrimination of early stage alzheimer’s disease from normal aging using inter-channel coherence network graphs. Annals of Biomedical Engineering, 41(6), 1233–1242. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10439-013-0788-4

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