Modulate the impact of the drowsiness on the resting state functional connectivity
Langue
EN
Article de revue
Ce document a été publié dans
Scientific Reports. 2024-04-15, vol. 14, n° 1, p. 8652
Résumé en anglais
This research explores different methodologies to modulate the effects of drowsiness on functional connectivity (FC) during resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (RS-fMRI). The study utilized a cohort of ...Lire la suite >
This research explores different methodologies to modulate the effects of drowsiness on functional connectivity (FC) during resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (RS-fMRI). The study utilized a cohort of students (MRi-Share) and classified individuals into drowsy, alert, and mixed/undetermined states based on observed respiratory oscillations. We analyzed the FC group difference between drowsy and alert individuals after five different processing methods: the reference method, two based on physiological and a global signal regression of the BOLD time series signal, and two based on Gaussian standardizations of the FC distribution. According to the reference method, drowsy individuals exhibit higher cortico-cortical FC than alert individuals. First, we demonstrated that each method reduced the differences between drowsy and alert states. The second result is that the global signal regression was quantitively the most effective, minimizing significant FC differences to only 3.3% of the total FCs. However, one should consider the risks of overcorrection often associated with this methodology. Therefore, choosing a less aggressive form of regression, such as the physiological method or Gaussian-based approaches, might be a more cautious approach. Third and last, using the Gaussian-based methods, cortico-subcortical and intra-default mode network (DMN) FCs were significantly greater in alert than drowsy subjects. These findings bear resemblance to the anticipated patterns during the onset of sleep, where the cortex isolates itself to assist in transitioning into deeper slow wave sleep phases, simultaneously disconnecting the DMN.< Réduire
Mots clés en anglais
Drowsiness
Functional connectivity
Resting-state
fMRI
Project ANR
Etude de cohorte sur la santé des étudiants - ANR-10-COHO-0005