Connectome spectrum electromagnetic tomography: A method to reconstruct electrical brain source networks at high-spatial resolution

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Abstract

Connectome spectrum electromagnetic tomography (CSET) combines diffusion MRI-derived structural connectivity data with well-established graph signal processing tools to solve the M/EEG inverse problem. Using simulated EEG signals from fMRI responses, and two EEG datasets on visual-evoked potentials, we provide evidence supporting that (i) CSET captures realistic neurophysiological patterns with better accuracy than state-of-the-art methods, (ii) CSET can reconstruct brain responses more accurately and with more robustness to intrinsic noise in the EEG signal. These results demonstrate that CSET offers high spatio-temporal accuracy, enabling neuroscientists to extend their research beyond the current limitations of low sampling frequency in functional MRI and the poor spatial resolution of M/EEG.

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Rué-Queralt, J., Fluhr, H., Tourbier, S., Aleman-Gómez, Y., Pascucci, D., Yerly, J., … Hagmann, P. (2024). Connectome spectrum electromagnetic tomography: A method to reconstruct electrical brain source networks at high-spatial resolution. Human Brain Mapping, 45(5). https://doi.org/10.1002/hbm.26638

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