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Pattern recognition applied to whole-brain neuroimaging data, such as functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI), has proved successful at discriminating psychiatric patients from healthy participants. However, predictive patterns obtained from whole-brain voxel-based features are difficult to interpret in terms of the underlying neurobiology. Many psychiatric disorders, such as depression and schizophrenia, are thought to be brain connectivity disorders. Therefore, pattern recognition based on network models might provide deeper insights and potentially more powerful predictions than whole-brain voxel-based approaches. Here, we build a novel sparse network-based discriminative modeling framework, based on Gaussian graphical models and L1-norm regularized linear Support Vector Machines (SVM). In addition, the proposed framework is optimized in terms of both predictive power and reproducibility/stability of the patterns. Our approach aims to provide better pattern interpretation than voxel-based whole-brain approaches by yielding stable brain connectivity patterns that underlie discriminative changes in brain function between the groups. We illustrate our technique by classifying patients with major depressive disorder (MDD) and healthy participants, in two (event- and block-related) fMRI datasets acquired while participants performed a gender discrimination and emotional task, respectively, during the visualization of emotional valent faces.
Pattern recognition approaches, such as the Support Vector Machine (SVM), have been successfully used to classify groups of individuals based on their patterns of brain activity or structure. However these approaches focus on finding group differences and are not applicable to situations where one is interested in accessing deviations from a specific class or population. In the present work we propose an application of the one-class SVM (OC-SVM) to investigate if patterns of fMRI response to sad facial expressions in depressed patients would be classified as outliers in relation to patterns of healthy control subjects. We defined features based on whole brain voxels and anatomical regions. In both cases we found a significant correlation between the OC-SVM predictions and the patients' Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression (HRSD), i.e. the more depressed the patients were the more of an outlier they were. In addition the OC-SVM split the patient groups into two subgroups whose membership was associated with future response to treatment. When applied to region-based features the OC-SVM classified 52% of patients as outliers. However among the patients classified as outliers 70% did not respond to treatment and among those classified as non-outliers 89% responded to treatment. In addition 89% of the healthy controls were classified as non-outliers.
Most current models assume that the perceptual and cognitive processes of visual word recognition and reading operate upon neuronally coded domain-general low-level visual representations – typically oriented line representations. We here demonstrate, consistent with neurophysiological theories of Bayesian-like predictive neural computations, that prior visual knowledge of words may be utilized to ‘explain away’ redundant and highly expected parts of the visual percept. Subsequent processing stages, accordingly, operate upon an optimized representation of the visual input, the orthographic prediction error, highlighting only the visual information relevant for word identification. We show that this optimized representation is related to orthographic word characteristics, accounts for word recognition behavior, and is processed early in the visual processing stream, i.e., in V4 and before 200 ms after word-onset. Based on these findings, we propose that prior visual-orthographic knowledge is used to optimize the representation of visually presented words, which in turn allows for highly efficient reading processes.
From age 5 to 7, there are remarkable improvements in children’s cognitive abilities (“5–7 shift”). In many countries, including Germany, formal schooling begins in this age range. It is, thus, unclear to what extent exposure to formal schooling contributes to the “5–7 shift.” In this longitudinal study, we investigated if schooling acts as a catalyst of maturation. We tested 5-year-old children who were born close to the official cutoff date for school entry and who were still attending a play-oriented kindergarten. One year later, the children were tested again. Some of the children had experienced their first year of schooling whereas the others had remained in kindergarten. Using 2 functional magnetic resonance imaging tasks that assessed episodic memory formation (i.e., subsequent memory effect), we found that children relied strongly on the medial temporal lobe (MTL) at both time points but not on the prefrontal cortex (PFC). In contrast, older children and adults typically show subsequent memory effects in both MTL and PFC. Both children groups improved in their memory performance, but there were no longitudinal changes nor group differences in neural activation. We conclude that successful memory formation in this age group relies more heavily on the MTL than in older age groups.
Introduction: Previous studies have established graph theoretical analysis of functional network connectivity (FNC) as a potential tool to detect neurobiological underpinnings of psychiatric disorders. Despite the promising outcomes in studies that examined FNC aberrancies in bipolar disorder (BD) and major depressive disorder (MDD), there is still a lack of research comparing both mood disorders, especially in a nondepressed state. In this study, we used graph theoretical network analysis to compare brain network properties of euthymic BD, euthymic MDD and healthy controls (HC) to evaluate whether these groups showed distinct features in FNC.
Methods: We collected resting‐state functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) data from 20 BD patients, 15 patients with recurrent MDD as well as 30 age‐ and gender‐matched HC. Graph theoretical analyses were then applied to investigate functional brain networks on a global and regional network level.
Results: Global network analysis revealed a significantly higher mean global clustering coefficient in BD compared to HC. We further detected frontal, temporal and subcortical nodes in emotion regulation areas such as the limbic system and associated regions exhibiting significant differences in network integration and segregation in BD compared to MDD patients and HC. Participants with MDD and HC only differed in frontal and insular network centrality.
Conclusion: In conclusion, our findings indicate that a significantly altered brain network topology in the limbic system might be a trait marker specific to BD. Brain network analysis in these regions may therefore be used to differentiate euthymic BD not only from HC but also from patients with MDD.
In human neuroscientific research, there has been an increasing interest in how the brain computes the value of an anticipated outcome. However, evidence is still missing about which valuation related brain regions are modulated by the proximity to an expected goal and the previously invested effort to reach a goal. The aim of this dissertation is to investigate the effects of goal proximity and invested effort on valuation related regions in the human brain. We addressed this question in two fMRI studies by integrating a commonly used reward anticipation task in differential versions of a Multitrial Reward Schedule Paradigm. In both experiments, subjects had to perform consecutive reward anticipation tasks under two different reward contingencies: in the delayed condition, participants received a monetary reward only after successful completion of multiple consecutive trials. In the immediate condition, money was earned after every successful trial. In the first study, we could demonstrate that the rostral cingulate zone of the posterior medial frontal cortex signals action value contingent to goal proximity, thereby replicating neurophysiological findings about goal proximity signals in a homologous region in non-human primates. The findings of the second study imply that brain regions associated with general cognitive control processes are modulated by previous effort investment. Furthermore, we found the posterior lateral prefrontal cortex and the orbitofrontal cortex to be involved in coding for the effort-based context of a situation. In sum, these results extend the role of the human rostral cingulate zone in outcome evaluation to the continuous updating of action values over a course of action steps based on the proximity to the expected reward. Furthermore, we tentatively suggest that previous effort investment invokes processes under the control of the executive system, and that posterior lateral prefrontal cortex and the orbitofrontal cortex are involved in an effort-based context representation that can be used for outcome evaluation that is dependent on the characteristics of the current situation.
We examined the neural signatures of stimulus features in visual working memory (WM) by integrating functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and event-related potential data recorded during mental manipulation of colors, rotation angles, and color–angle conjunctions. The N200, negative slow wave, and P3b were modulated by the information content of WM, and an fMRI-constrained source model revealed a progression in neural activity from posterior visual areas to higher order areas in the ventral and dorsal processing streams. Color processing was associated with activity in inferior frontal gyrus during encoding and retrieval, whereas angle processing involved right parietal regions during the delay interval. WM for color–angle conjunctions did not involve any additional neural processes. The finding that different patterns of brain activity underlie WM for color and spatial information is consistent with ideas that the ventral/dorsal “what/where” segregation of perceptual processing influences WM organization. The absence of characteristic signatures of conjunction-related brain activity, which was generally intermediate between the 2 single conditions, suggests that conjunction judgments are based on the coordinated activity of these 2 streams. Keywords: EEG, fMRI, source analysis, visual, working memory
The comparison of persons is pervasive in social judgement and human decision making and yet its neural substrate is poorly explored. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging we investigated the brain activities of participants comparing other persons with each other (other vs. other comparison - OOC) and with themselves (self vs. other comparison - SOC) as regards psychological (intelligence) and physical (height) characteristics. We found that the comparison of these two person characteristics differ in their neural activation patterns in the OOC as well as in the SOC with higher activity increases for intelligence than height comparison in several areas in medial frontal and orbitofrontal cortex and posterior cingulate cortex suggesting that their activation scales with the demand on person comparison. The person comparison network strikingly overlaps the one commonly described for the classic theory of mind tasks. We interpret this overlap as indicating perspective taking common to person comparison and theory of mind. Furthermore, we suggest that the neural differences between the SOC and the OOC especially in the dorsal part of the medial frontal cortex rely on the different degree of the self involved in the two types of comparisons. The results additionally suggest that the decision directions of self-relevant comparisons, especially in the intelligence comparison of the SOC, resulted in differences in the activation of the medial frontal cortex, which also relies on differences in the reward anticipation and self-relatedness of these decisions.
Methods for dichoptic stimulus presentation in functional magnetic resonance imaging : a review
(2009)
Dichoptic stimuli (different stimuli displayed to each eye) are increasingly being used in functional brain imaging experiments using visual stimulation. These studies include investigation into binocular rivalry, interocular information transfer, three-dimensional depth perception as well as impairments of the visual system like amblyopia and stereodeficiency. In this paper, we review various approaches of displaying dichoptic stimulus used in functional magnetic resonance imaging experiments. These include traditional approaches of using filters (red-green, red-blue, polarizing) with optical assemblies as well as newer approaches of using bi-screen goggles.
Das ereigniskorrelierte Potential (EKP) P300 ist eines der am häufigsten untersuchten Potentiale des Elektroenzephalogramms (EEG). Wegen der bedeutsamen Rolle der P300 in der kognitiven Forschung mit gesunden Probanden und psychiatrischen Patienten kommt der Suche nach ihren neuronalen Generatoren ein hoher Stellenwert zu. Man geht im Allgemeinen davon aus, dass sie kein einheitliches Potential darstellt und von mehreren weit verstreuten Quellen generiert wird. Die Fragen nach der genauen Anzahl der P300-Subkomponenten, ihrer Lokalisierung sowie den ihnen zugrunde liegenden kognitiven Prozesse sind jedoch nach wie vor ungelöst. Die Zielsetzung der vorliegenden Arbeit war, die P300 mit Hilfe der Kombination vom EEG und der funktionalen Magnetresonanztomografie (fMRT) in ihre Subkomponenten zu untergliedern und deren Quellen zu lokalisieren. Zu diesem Zweck wurden drei kombinierte EEG/fMRT-Studien durchgeführt. Die ersten beiden Studien beinhalten eine abgewandelte Form des klassischen Oddballparadigmas. Bei der dritten Studie handelt es sich um ein Arbeitsgedächtnisexperiment. Durch die Verknüpfung der fMRT-Ergebnisse mit EKP-Daten aus den beiden Oddball-Experimenten konnten die neuronalen Quellen der zwei wichtigsten Subkomponenten der P300, der P3a und P3b, lokalisiert werden. Es konnte gezeigt werden, dass inferiore und posteriore parietale (IPL bzw. PPC) und inferior temporale (IT) Areale zur Entstehung der P3b beitrugen, während hauptsächlich die präzentralen Regionen (PrCS) die P3a generierten. Die Ergebnisse des Arbeitsgedächtnisexperiments bestätigten die P3b-Quellenlokalisierung der Oddball-Untersuchung mit einr Beteiligung von PPC und IT an der Generierung der P3b-Komponente. Das Arbeitsgedächtnisexperiment verdeutlichte aber auch, dass eine komplexere Abrufanforderung (mit langen Reaktionszeiten) zu einer anhaltenden Aktivität im PPC und einer späten Antwort im ventrolateralen präfrontalen Kortex (VLPFC) führte, die eine zweite P3b-Subkomponente generierten. Durch eine umfassende zeitlich-räumliche Trennung der neuronalen Aktivität beim Arbeitsgedächtnisabruf konnten darüber hinaus die einzelnen Stufen der beteiligten Informationsverarbeitungsprozesse (mentale Chronometrie) beschrieben werden. Diese Anwendung ging über die „reine“ Quellenlokalisation der P300-Komponenten hinaus. Die Ergebnisse zeigten frühe transiente Aktivierungen im IT, die sich zeitlich mit dem Beginn einer anhaltenden Aktivität im PPC überlappten. Darüber hinaus wurden eine späte transiente Aktivität im VLPFC und eine späte anhaltende Aktivität im medialen frontalen und motorischen Kortex (MFC bzw. MC) beobachtet. Es liegt nahe, dass diese neuronalen Signaturen einzelne Stufen kognitiver Aufgabenverarbeitungsschritte wie Reizevaluation (IT), Operationen am Gedächtnispuffer (PPC), aktiven Abruf (VLPFC) und Reaktionsorganisation (MFC und MC) reflektieren. Die vorgestellten Quellenmodelle zeigten übereinstimmend, dass mehrere kortikale Generatoren das P300-EKP erzeugen. Dabei trugen neben den erwarteten parietalen interessanterweise auch inferior temporale und inferior frontale Quellen zur P3b bei, während die P3a vor allem auf anterioren Generatoren im prämotorischen Kortex basierte. Diese Ergebnisse bestätigen teilweise die bisherigen Lokalisationsmodelle, die weitgehend auf neuropsychologischen und invasiven neurophysiologischen Befunden beruhen, widersprechen ihnen aber auch zum Teil, besonders was die Abwesenheit der postulierten präfrontalen und hippocampalen Beiträge zur P3a bzw. P3b betrifft.