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Classification of EEG Signals Reveals a Focal Aftereffect of 10 Hz Motor Cortex Transcranial Alternating Current Stimulation.

Elinor Tzvi-MinkerJalal AlizadehChristine SchubertJoseph Classen
Published in: Cerebral cortex communications (2022)
Transcranial alternating current stimulation (tACS) modulates oscillations in a frequency- and location-specific manner and affects cognitive and motor functions. This effect appears during stimulation as well as "offline," following stimulation, presumably reflecting neuroplasticity. Whether tACS produces long-lasting aftereffects that are physiologically meaningful, is still of current debate. Thus, for tACS to serve as a reliable method for modulating activity within neural networks, it is important to first establish whether "offline" aftereffects are robust and reliable. In this study, we employed a novel machine-learning approach to detect signatures of neuroplasticity following 10-Hz tACS to two critical nodes of the motor network: left motor cortex (lMC) and right cerebellum (rCB). To this end, we trained a classifier to distinguish between signals following lMC-tACS, rCB-tACS, and sham. Our results demonstrate better classification of electroencephalography (EEG) signals in both theta (θ, 4-8 Hz) and alpha (α, 8-13 Hz) frequency bands to lMC-tACS compared with rCB-tACS/sham, at lMC-tACS stimulation location. Source reconstruction allocated these effects to premotor cortex. Stronger correlation between classification accuracies in θ and α in lMC-tACS suggested an association between θ and α efffects. Together these results suggest that EEG signals over premotor cortex contains unique signatures of neuroplasticity following 10-Hz motor cortex tACS.
Keyphrases
  • machine learning
  • functional connectivity
  • working memory
  • deep learning
  • resting state
  • gene expression
  • lymph node
  • dna methylation
  • early stage
  • high intensity
  • resistance training
  • cerebral blood flow