AI Article Synopsis

  • The paper discusses a new method for assessing prepulse inhibition (PPI) using both electromyography (EMG) and electroencephalography (EEG) to better understand sensorimotor gating in humans.
  • The study involved 22 healthy participants and combined recordings of muscular responses (using EMG) and brain activity (using EEG), specifically looking at event-related potentials.
  • This approach successfully reduced muscle-related artifacts in the EEG signals and demonstrated that the new method could effectively evaluate neural PPI within a crucial time frame (100-200 ms) that other tests miss.

Article Abstract

Prepulse inhibition (PPI) test has been widely used to evaluate sensorimotor gating. In humans, deficits in this mechanism are measured through the orbicularis muscle response using electromyography (EMG). Although this mechanism can be modulated by several brain structures and is impaired in some pathologies as schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, neural PPI evaluation is rarely performed in humans. Since eye blinks are a consequence of PPI stimulation, they strongly contaminate the electroencephalogram (EEG) signal. This paper describes a method to reduce muscular artifacts and enable neural PPI assessment through EEG in parallel to muscular PPI evaluation using EMG. Both types of signal were simultaneously recorded in 22 healthy subjects. PPI was evaluated by the acoustical startle response with EMG and by the P2-N1 event-related potential (ERP) using EEG in Fz, Cz, and Pz electrodes. In order to remove EEG artifacts, Independent Component Analysis (ICA) was performed using two methods. Firstly, visual inspection discarded components containing artifact characteristics as ocular and tonic muscle artifacts. The second method used visual inspection as gold standard to validate parameters in an automated component selection using the SASICA algorithm. As an outcome, EEG artifacts were effectively removed and equivalent neural PPI evaluation performance was obtained using both methods, with subjects exhibiting consistent neural as well as muscular PPI. This novel method improves PPI test, enabling neural gating mechanisms assessment within the latency of 100-200 ms, which is not evaluated by other sensory gating tests as P50 and mismatch negativity.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6168667PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2018.00654DOI Listing

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