Spatiotemporal dynamics of EEG microstates in four- to eight-year-old children: Age- and sex-related effects.
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2022-07-12
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Abstract
The ultrafast spatiotemporal dynamics of large-scale neural networks can be examined using resting-state electroencephalography (EEG) microstates, representing transient periods of synchronized neural activity that evolve dynamically over time. In adults, four canonical microstates have been shown to explain most topographic variance in resting-state EEG. Their temporal structures are age-, sex- and state-dependent, and are susceptible to pathological brain states. However, no studies have assessed the spatial and temporal properties of EEG microstates exclusively during early childhood, a critical period of rapid brain development. Here we sought to investigate EEG microstates recorded with high-density EEG in a large sample of 103, 4-8-year-old children. Using data-driven k-means cluster analysis, we show that the four canonical microstates reported in adult populations already exist in early childhood. Using multiple linear regressions, we demonstrate that the temporal dynamics of two microstates are associated with age and sex. Source localization suggests that attention- and cognitive control-related networks govern the topographies of the age- and sex-dependent microstates. These novel findings provide unique insights into functional brain development in children captured with EEG microstates.
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Bagdasarov, Armen, Kenneth Roberts, Lucie Bréchet, Denis Brunet, Christoph M Michel and Michael S Gaffrey (2022). Spatiotemporal dynamics of EEG microstates in four- to eight-year-old children: Age- and sex-related effects. Developmental cognitive neuroscience, 57. p. 101134. 10.1016/j.dcn.2022.101134 Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/25570.
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Armen Bagdasarov
Armen Bagdasarov is a fourth-year Ph.D. student in clinical psychology at Duke University. He received his B.A. in psychology at the University of Pennsylvania in 2018. Following, he completed the two-year Sara S. Sparrow Fellowship in Clinical Neuroscience at the Yale Child Study Center. In 2020, Armen received the National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship.
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