Title :
Instantaneous frequency and amplitude modulation of EEG in the hippocampus reveals state dependent temporal structure
Author :
Nguyen, David P. ; Barbieri, Riccardo ; Wilson, Matthew A. ; Brown, Emery N.
Author_Institution :
Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences at MIT, Cambridge, MA USA
Abstract :
EEG and LFP activity reflect the dynamic and organized interactions of neural ensembles; therefore, it may be possible to use the features of brain rhythms to determine the computational state of a neuronal network. When neuronal networks are activated, physical principles predict that the frequency content of the field potential should reflect the network state, per se, and ergo the state transition. A novel way for characterizing brain states is by quantifying the temporal structure of AM and FM activity (change in amplitude and frequency over time) for brain rhythms of interest. The concept of AM and FM, in the quantitative sense, is virtually unexplored in systems neuroscience. This is not surprising considering estimation of FM activity requires fine temporal and precise estimation of instantaneous frequency. For AM activity, the absolute value of the Hilbert transform is sufficient. Here, we outline a practical pole tracking algorithm which uses a Kalman filter for univariate AR processes to estimate instantaneous frequency. We demonstrate the filter performance using simulated chirp and real EEG/LFP data recorded from the rat hippocampus; and show that AM/FM activity in EEG/LFP is temporally structured and dependent on behavioral and cognitive state. This algorithm has the potential to be a practical tool for characterizing fundamental structure in electrophysiology data and classifying computational states in the brain.
Keywords :
Amplitude modulation; Biological neural networks; Computer networks; Electroencephalography; Filters; Frequency estimation; Frequency modulation; Hippocampus; Neuroscience; Rhythm; Algorithms; Animals; Bias (Epidemiology); Biomedical Engineering; Electroencephalography; Electrophysiological Phenomena; Hippocampus; Models, Neurological; Nerve Net; Periodicity; Rats; Theta Rhythm;
Conference_Titel :
Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society, 2008. EMBS 2008. 30th Annual International Conference of the IEEE
Conference_Location :
Vancouver, BC
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-1814-5
Electronic_ISBN :
1557-170X
DOI :
10.1109/IEMBS.2008.4649506