Non-invasive neurophysiological recordings, such as those measured by magnetoencelography (MEG), provide insight into the behaviour of neural networks and how these networks change with factors such as task performance, disease state, and age. Recently, there has been a trend in describing neurophysiological recordings as a series of transient bursts of neural activity rather than averaged sustained oscillations as burst characteristics may be more directly correlated with the neurological generators of brain activity. In this work, we investigate how beta burst characteristics change with age in a large open access dataset. The objectives are (1) to detect and characterize transient beta bursts over the ipsilateral and contralateral primary sensorimotor cortices during a unilateral motor task performance and during wakeful resting, and (2) to identify age-related changes in beta burst characteristics, in the context of earlier reports of age-related changes in beta suppression and the post-movement beta rebound. MEG data, acquired at the Cambridge Centre for Ageing and Neuroscience, of roughly 600 participants with a nearly uniform distribution of ages between 18 and 88 years old was used for analysis. We found that burst rate is the predominant factor related to age-related changes in the amplitude of the induced beta rhythm responses associated with a button press task. Furthermore, we present a cross-validation of burst parameters detected at the sensor- (peak sensor and sensor ROI) and source-level (beamformer spatial filter). This work is as an important step in characterizing transient bursts in neuromagnetic signals in the temporal domain, towards a better understanding of the healthy aging human brain.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroimage.2020.117245DOI Listing

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