What are we measuring with M/EEG? Luzia Troebinger.

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Presentation transcript:

What are we measuring with M/EEG? Luzia Troebinger

The birth of electrophysiology “I am attacked by two very opposite sects—the scientists and the know-nothings. Both laugh at me—calling me “the frogs’ dancing-master”. Yet I know that I have discovered one of the greatest forces in nature.” Luigi Galvani First electrophysiological measurements starting in 17 th century Luigi Galvani and his wife Lucia Galeazzi study contractions of isolated frog muscle preparations 1875: Richard Caton reports using galvanometer to measure electrical impulses from the surface of animal brains Hans Berger develops the first EEG and provides the first recordings in human subjects – first characterisations of normal/abnormal oscillatory activity

History of MEG Josephson effect discovered in 1962 – important later for development of SQUIDs David Cohen published paper on first MEG recordings in 1968 (Science) SQUID is invented in 1965 by Robert Jaklevic, John J. Lambe, Arnold Silver, and James E. Zimmermann

Instrumentation

EEG Electrode System Bipolar measurementsUnipolar measurements Potential difference between active/reference electrodes is amplified and filtered Bipolar Montage: each channel represents difference between adjacent electrodes Unipolar/Referential Montage: each channel is potential difference between electrode/designated reference electrode

MEG Sensors: fixed location inside the dewar. Liquid Helium Thermically isolated by surrounding vacuum space

SQUID Superconducting Quantum Interference Device Highly sensitive Can measure field changes in the order of femto-Tesla ( T) Earth’s magnetic field: T Basically consists of a superconducting ring interrupted by two Josephson Junctions

Flux Transformers Magnetometer -consist of a single superconducting coil -highly sensitive, but also pick up environmental noise Gradiometers: -consist of two oppositely wound coils -sources in the brain - differentially affect the two coils -environmental sources have the SAME EFFECT on both coils  0 net current flow

Planar/axial gradiometers Axial Gradiometer MEG sensors… …are aligned orthogonally to the scalp …record gradient of magnetic field along the radial direction Planar Gradiometer MEG sensors… …two detector coils on the same plane …have sensitivity distribution similar to bipolar EEG setup

MEG today…

What are we measuring?

Where does the signal come from? Signals stem from synchronous activity of large (~1000s) groups of neurons close to each other and exhibiting similar patterns of activity Most of the signal generated by pyramidal neurons in the cortex (parallel to each other, oriented perpendicular to the surface) M/EEG measures synaptic currents, not action potentials (currents flow in opposite directions and cancel out!)

Building the connection…

The Forward problem: From Sensor to Source Level Head model Sensor level data Head Position? Source Level Forward Model

Head Models We need a link between the signal in the brain and what we measure at the sensors Different head models available: Single Sphere Multiple Spheres Finite Element Boundary Element

But isn’t MEG ‘blind’ to gyral sources? Given a perfect spherically symmetric volume conductor, radial sources do not give rise to an external magnetic field. Assume sources on crests of gyri (as radial as it gets) Perfectly spherical head model these sources are very close to the sensors Surrounded by off-radial cortex to which MEG is highly sensitive Signal is spatial summation over ~mm 2 of cortex Sources remain partly visible (Hillebrand and Barnes, 2002)

What about deeper structures? Source depth is an issue since magnetic fields fall off sharply with distance from source Complex cytoarchitecture of deeper structures Depends on a lot of things (forward model, SNR of data, priors about origin of our data) Using realistic anatomical and electrophysiological models, it is possible to detect activity from deeper structures (Attal et al)

Supp_Motor_Area Parietal_Sup Frontal_Inf_Oper Occipital_Mid Frontal_Med_Orb Calcarine Heschl Insula Cingulum_Ant ParaHippocampal Hippocampus Putamen Amygdala Caudate Cingulum_Post Brainstem Thalamus STN Hung et al. 2010; Cornwell et al. 2007, 2008 Parkonen et al Cornwell et al. 2008; Riggs et al RMS Lead field Over subjects and voxels Timmerman et al MEG Sensitivity to depth

Inversion Link what’s happening in the brain to what we are measuring at the sensors. Inverse problem is ill posed – many possible solutions! Need some prior information about what’s going on.

Conclusions Measuring signals due to aggregate post-synaptic currents (modeled as dipoles) Lead fields are the predicted signal produced by a dipole of unit amplitude. MEG – limited by SNR: Increasing SNR will increase sensitivity to deeper structures EEG - limited by head models. More accurate head models will lead to more accurate reconstruction.