On-scalp MEG SQUIDs are sensitive to early somatosensory activity unseen by conventional MEG
Artikel i vetenskaplig tidskrift, 2020

Magnetoencephalography (MEG) has a unique capacity to resolve the spatio-temporal development of brain activity from non-invasive measurements. Conventional MEG, however, relies on sensors that sample from a distance (20–40 ​mm) to the head due to thermal insulation requirements (the MEG sensors function at 4 ​K in a helmet). A gain in signal strength and spatial resolution may be achieved if sensors are moved closer to the head. Here, we report a study comparing measurements from a seven-channel on-scalp SQUID MEG system to those from a conventional (in-helmet) SQUID MEG system. We compared the spatio-temporal resolution between on-scalp and conventional MEG by comparing the discrimination accuracy for neural activity patterns resulting from stimulating five different phalanges of the right hand. Because of proximity and sensor density differences between on-scalp and conventional MEG, we hypothesized that on-scalp MEG would allow for a more high-resolved assessment of these activity patterns, and therefore also a better classification performance in discriminating between neural activations from the different phalanges. We observed that on-scalp MEG provided better classification performance during an early post-stimulus period (10–20 ​ms). This corresponded to the electroencephalographic (EEG) component P16/N16 and was an unexpected observation as this component is usually not observed in conventional MEG. This finding shows that on-scalp MEG enables a richer registration of the cortical signal, indicating a sensitivity to what are potentially sources in the thalamo-cortical radiation. We had originally expected that on-scalp MEG would provide better classification accuracy based on activity in proximity to the P60m component compared to conventional MEG. This component indeed allowed for the best classification performance for both MEG systems (60–75%, chance 50%). However, we did not find that on-scalp MEG allowed for better classification than conventional MEG at this latency. We suggest that this absence of differences is due to the limited sensor coverage in the recording, in combination with our strategy for positioning the on-scalp MEG sensors. We show how the current sensor coverage may have limited our chances to register the necessary between-phalange source field dissimilarities for fair hypothesis testing, an approach we otherwise believe to be useful for future benchmarking measurements.

Magnetoencephalography

Forward problem

Source localization

Författare

L.M. Andersen

Karolinska Institutet

Aarhus Universitet

Christoph Pfeiffer

Chalmers, Mikroteknologi och nanovetenskap, Kvantkomponentfysik

Aalto-Yliopisto

Silvia Ruffieux

Chalmers, Mikroteknologi och nanovetenskap, Kvantkomponentfysik

B. Riaz

Göteborgs universitet

Dag Winkler

Chalmers, Mikroteknologi och nanovetenskap, Kvantkomponentfysik

Justin Schneiderman

Göteborgs universitet

D. Lundqvist

Karolinska Institutet

NeuroImage

1053-8119 (ISSN) 1095-9572 (eISSN)

Vol. 221 117157

Ämneskategorier

Medicinsk laboratorie- och mätteknik

Annan medicinteknik

Annan fysik

Signalbehandling

DOI

10.1016/j.neuroimage.2020.117157

PubMed

32659354

Mer information

Senast uppdaterat

2022-04-05