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Non-Parametric Evaluation Methods of the Brain Activity of a Bottlenose Dolphin during an Assisted Therapy

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Dolphin Assisted Therapies (DAT) can be used with any person or group with specific needs and it can be as disparate as people at risk of social exclusion, eating disorders, terminally ill, mental health disorders, among many others. This paper is focused on measuring and analyzing d...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Moreno Escobar, Jesús Jaime, Morales Matamoros, Oswaldo, Aguilar del Villar, Erika Yolanda, Tejeida Padilla, Ricardo, Lina Reyes, Ixchel, Espinoza Zambrano, Brenda, Luna Gómez, Brandon David, Calderón Morfín, Víctor Hugo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7914889/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33562006
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani11020417
Descripción
Sumario:SIMPLE SUMMARY: Dolphin Assisted Therapies (DAT) can be used with any person or group with specific needs and it can be as disparate as people at risk of social exclusion, eating disorders, terminally ill, mental health disorders, among many others. This paper is focused on measuring and analyzing dolphins brain activity when DAT is taking place, in order to identify if there is any differences in female dolphin’s neuronal signal when it is interacting with control or intervention subjects. In addition, we designed a wireless and portable electroencephalographic single-channel signal capture device to monitor the brain activity of a female bottle-nose dolphin. Our findings also validate the evidence that the interaction between a patient with a certain disease or disorder and undergoes to a DAT modifies usual brain activity behavior of a female bottle-nose dolphin. ABSTRACT: Dolphin-Assisted Therapies (DAT) are alternative therapies aimed to reduce anxiety levels, stress relief and physical benefits. This paper is focused on measuring and analyzing dolphins brain activity when DAT is taking place in order to identify if there is any differences in female dolphin’s neuronal signal when it is interacting with control or intervention subjects, performing our research in Delfiniti, Ixtapa, Mexico facilities. We designed a wireless and portable electroencephalographic single-channel signal capture sensor to acquire and monitor the brain activity of a female bottle-nose dolphin. This EEG sensor was able to show that dolphin activity at rest is characterized by high spectral power at slow-frequencies bands. When the dolphin participated in DAT, a 23.53% increment in the 12–30 Hz frequency band was observed, but this only occurred for patients with some disease or disorder, given that 0.5–4 Hz band keeps it at 17.91% when there is a control patient. Regarding the fractal or Self-Affine Analysis, we found for all samples studied that at the beginning the dolphin’s brain activity behaved as a self-affine fractal described by a power-law until the fluctuations of voltage reached the crossovers, and after the crossovers these fluctuations left this scaling behavior. Hence, our findings validate the hypothesis that the participation in a DAT of a Patient with a certain disease or disorder modifies the usual behavior of a female bottle-nose dolphin.