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From Oscillatory Transcranial Current Stimulation to Scalp EEG Changes: A Biophysical and Physiological Modeling Study

Both biophysical and neurophysiological aspects need to be considered to assess the impact of electric fields induced by transcranial current stimulation (tCS) on the cerebral cortex and the subsequent effects occurring on scalp EEG. The objective of this work was to elaborate a global model allowin...

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Autores principales: Merlet, Isabelle, Birot, Gwénaël, Salvador, Ricardo, Molaee-Ardekani, Behnam, Mekonnen, Abeye, Soria-Frish, Aureli, Ruffini, Giulio, Miranda, Pedro C., Wendling, Fabrice
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3585369/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23468970
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0057330
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author Merlet, Isabelle
Birot, Gwénaël
Salvador, Ricardo
Molaee-Ardekani, Behnam
Mekonnen, Abeye
Soria-Frish, Aureli
Ruffini, Giulio
Miranda, Pedro C.
Wendling, Fabrice
author_facet Merlet, Isabelle
Birot, Gwénaël
Salvador, Ricardo
Molaee-Ardekani, Behnam
Mekonnen, Abeye
Soria-Frish, Aureli
Ruffini, Giulio
Miranda, Pedro C.
Wendling, Fabrice
author_sort Merlet, Isabelle
collection PubMed
description Both biophysical and neurophysiological aspects need to be considered to assess the impact of electric fields induced by transcranial current stimulation (tCS) on the cerebral cortex and the subsequent effects occurring on scalp EEG. The objective of this work was to elaborate a global model allowing for the simulation of scalp EEG signals under tCS. In our integrated modeling approach, realistic meshes of the head tissues and of the stimulation electrodes were first built to map the generated electric field distribution on the cortical surface. Secondly, source activities at various cortical macro-regions were generated by means of a computational model of neuronal populations. The model parameters were adjusted so that populations generated an oscillating activity around 10 Hz resembling typical EEG alpha activity. In order to account for tCS effects and following current biophysical models, the calculated component of the electric field normal to the cortex was used to locally influence the activity of neuronal populations. Lastly, EEG under both spontaneous and tACS-stimulated (transcranial sinunoidal tCS from 4 to 16 Hz) brain activity was simulated at the level of scalp electrodes by solving the forward problem in the aforementioned realistic head model. Under the 10 Hz-tACS condition, a significant increase in alpha power occurred in simulated scalp EEG signals as compared to the no-stimulation condition. This increase involved most channels bilaterally, was more pronounced on posterior electrodes and was only significant for tACS frequencies from 8 to 12 Hz. The immediate effects of tACS in the model agreed with the post-tACS results previously reported in real subjects. Moreover, additional information was also brought by the model at other electrode positions or stimulation frequency. This suggests that our modeling approach can be used to compare, interpret and predict changes occurring on EEG with respect to parameters used in specific stimulation configurations.
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spelling pubmed-35853692013-03-06 From Oscillatory Transcranial Current Stimulation to Scalp EEG Changes: A Biophysical and Physiological Modeling Study Merlet, Isabelle Birot, Gwénaël Salvador, Ricardo Molaee-Ardekani, Behnam Mekonnen, Abeye Soria-Frish, Aureli Ruffini, Giulio Miranda, Pedro C. Wendling, Fabrice PLoS One Research Article Both biophysical and neurophysiological aspects need to be considered to assess the impact of electric fields induced by transcranial current stimulation (tCS) on the cerebral cortex and the subsequent effects occurring on scalp EEG. The objective of this work was to elaborate a global model allowing for the simulation of scalp EEG signals under tCS. In our integrated modeling approach, realistic meshes of the head tissues and of the stimulation electrodes were first built to map the generated electric field distribution on the cortical surface. Secondly, source activities at various cortical macro-regions were generated by means of a computational model of neuronal populations. The model parameters were adjusted so that populations generated an oscillating activity around 10 Hz resembling typical EEG alpha activity. In order to account for tCS effects and following current biophysical models, the calculated component of the electric field normal to the cortex was used to locally influence the activity of neuronal populations. Lastly, EEG under both spontaneous and tACS-stimulated (transcranial sinunoidal tCS from 4 to 16 Hz) brain activity was simulated at the level of scalp electrodes by solving the forward problem in the aforementioned realistic head model. Under the 10 Hz-tACS condition, a significant increase in alpha power occurred in simulated scalp EEG signals as compared to the no-stimulation condition. This increase involved most channels bilaterally, was more pronounced on posterior electrodes and was only significant for tACS frequencies from 8 to 12 Hz. The immediate effects of tACS in the model agreed with the post-tACS results previously reported in real subjects. Moreover, additional information was also brought by the model at other electrode positions or stimulation frequency. This suggests that our modeling approach can be used to compare, interpret and predict changes occurring on EEG with respect to parameters used in specific stimulation configurations. Public Library of Science 2013-02-28 /pmc/articles/PMC3585369/ /pubmed/23468970 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0057330 Text en © 2013 Merlet et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Merlet, Isabelle
Birot, Gwénaël
Salvador, Ricardo
Molaee-Ardekani, Behnam
Mekonnen, Abeye
Soria-Frish, Aureli
Ruffini, Giulio
Miranda, Pedro C.
Wendling, Fabrice
From Oscillatory Transcranial Current Stimulation to Scalp EEG Changes: A Biophysical and Physiological Modeling Study
title From Oscillatory Transcranial Current Stimulation to Scalp EEG Changes: A Biophysical and Physiological Modeling Study
title_full From Oscillatory Transcranial Current Stimulation to Scalp EEG Changes: A Biophysical and Physiological Modeling Study
title_fullStr From Oscillatory Transcranial Current Stimulation to Scalp EEG Changes: A Biophysical and Physiological Modeling Study
title_full_unstemmed From Oscillatory Transcranial Current Stimulation to Scalp EEG Changes: A Biophysical and Physiological Modeling Study
title_short From Oscillatory Transcranial Current Stimulation to Scalp EEG Changes: A Biophysical and Physiological Modeling Study
title_sort from oscillatory transcranial current stimulation to scalp eeg changes: a biophysical and physiological modeling study
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3585369/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23468970
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0057330
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