Brain Dynamics of Aging: Multiscale Variability of EEG Signals at Rest and during an Auditory Oddball Task1,2,3

Recently, the study of brain signal fluctuations is widely put forward as a promising entry point to characterize brain dynamics in health and disease. Although interesting results have been reported regarding how variability of brain activations can serve as an indicator of performance and adaptabi...

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Published ineNeuro Vol. 2; no. 3
Main Authors Sleimen-Malkoun, Rita, Perdikis, Dionysios, Müller, Viktor, Blanc, Jean-Luc, Huys, Raoul, Temprado, Jean-Jacques, Jirsa, Viktor K.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Society for Neuroscience 03.06.2015
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Summary:Recently, the study of brain signal fluctuations is widely put forward as a promising entry point to characterize brain dynamics in health and disease. Although interesting results have been reported regarding how variability of brain activations can serve as an indicator of performance and adaptability in elderly, many uncertainties and controversies remain with regard to the comparability, reproducibility, and generality of the described findings, as well as the ensuing interpretations. The present work focused on the study of fluctuations of cortical activity across time scales in young and older healthy adults. The main objective was to offer a comprehensive characterization of the changes of brain (cortical) signal variability during aging, and to make the link with known underlying structural, neurophysiological, and functional modifications, as well as aging theories. We analyzed electroencephalogram (EEG) data of young and elderly adults, which were collected at resting state and during an auditory oddball task. We used a wide battery of metrics that typically are separately applied in the literature, and we compared them with more specific ones that address their limits. Our procedure aimed to overcome some of the methodological limitations of earlier studies and verify whether previous findings can be reproduced and extended to different experimental conditions. In both rest and task conditions, our results mainly revealed that EEG signals presented systematic age-related changes that were time-scale-dependent with regard to the structure of fluctuations (complexity) but not with regard to their magnitude. Namely, compared with young adults, the cortical fluctuations of the elderly were more complex at shorter time scales, but less complex at longer scales, although always showing a lower variance. Additionally, the elderly showed signs of spatial, as well as between, experimental conditions dedifferentiation. By integrating these so far isolated findings across time scales, metrics, and conditions, the present study offers an overview of age-related changes in the fluctuation electrocortical activity while making the link with underlying brain dynamics.
Bibliography:Author contributions: R.S.-M., D.P., V.M., and V.K.J. designed research; R.S.-M., D.P., V.M., and V.K.J. performed research; R.S.-M., D.P., and J.L.-B. analyzed data; R.S.-M., D.P., V.M., R.H., J.-L.B., J.-J.T. and V.K.J. wrote the paper.
This work was supported by the Aix-Marseille Université foundation A*Midex-CoordAge project, and the Max Planck Society.
R.S.-M. and D.P. contributed equally to this work.
The authors report no financial conflicts of interest.
ISSN:2373-2822
DOI:10.1523/ENEURO.0067-14.2015