Reduced degree of long-range phase synchrony in pathological human brain

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Abstract

In this paper multivariate spontaneous EEG signals from three broad groups of human subjects - control, seizure, and mania - were studied with the aim of investigating the possible effect of these pathologies on the degree of phase synchronization between cortical areas. The degree of phase synchrony was measured by two recently developed measures which are more suitable than classical indices like correlation or coherence when dealing with nonlinear and non-stationary signals like the EEG. Signals were reduced to seven frequency bands (delta, theta, alpha-1, alpha-2, beta-1, beta-2 and gamma) which were statistically compared between the normal and the other two groups. It was found that the degree of long-range synchrony was significantly reduced for both pathological groups as compared with the control group. No clear differences were found in the degrees of short-range synchrony.

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Bhattacharya, J. (2001). Reduced degree of long-range phase synchrony in pathological human brain. Acta Neurobiologiae Experimentalis, 61(4), 309–318. https://doi.org/10.55782/ane-2001-1406

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