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How vigilance states influence source imaging of physiological brain oscillations: Evidence from intracranial EEG

  • Xiaoyan Wei
  • , Jawata Afnan
  • , Tamir Avigdor
  • , Nicolás von Ellenrieder
  • , Édouard Delaire
  • , Jessica Royer
  • , Alyssa Ho
  • , Erica Minato
  • , Katharina Schiller
  • , Kassem Jaber
  • , Yingqi Laetitia Wang
  • , Matt Moye
  • , Boris C. Bernhardt
  • , Jean Marc Lina
  • , Christophe Grova
  • , Birgit Frauscher

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal Articlepeer-review

Abstract

Cortical oscillations across sleep-wake cycles are essential for coordinating functional brain dynamics. High-density electroencephalography (HDEEG) combined with electrical source imaging (ESI) provides a noninvasive approach to map cortical dynamics; however, its ability to capture spatial ongoing oscillations across different vigilance states remains uncertain. Here, we directly compared HDEEG source imaging by comparing it to a normative intracranial EEG (iEEG) atlas from 110 epilepsy patients with electrodes in healthy brain regions ( https://mni-open-ieegatlas.research.mcgill.ca/ ). Wavelet-based Maximum Entropy on the Mean (wMEM) was applied to localize oscillatory patterns using overnight HDEEG recordings from 35 healthy adults (16 females, mean age 31.1 ± 6.3 years). Virtual iEEG (ViEEG) signals were estimated by applying an iEEG forward model to wMEM sources to examine oscillatory patterns across 5 frequency bands, 38 regions, and 4 vigilance states. We found that HDEEG source imaging exhibited comparable spectral patterns of iEEG in low frequencies but overestimated oscillatory activities at high frequencies. Lateral cortical regions exhibited more accurate source estimation than medial regions (p < 0.05). After removing the aperiodic components, the spectral alignment between ViEEG and iEEG significantly improved except for N3 sleep (p < 0.05). Oscillatory peak patterns in ViEEG reflect state-dependent dynamics that are broadly consistent with iEEG peaks (p < 0.05). HDEEG-derived ViEEG and magnetoencephalography-derived ViEEG approximated iEEG spectral features, showing complementary correspondence. These findings reveal that vigilance states significantly shape cortical oscillations by altering their spectral and spatial profiles. Our results establish HDEEG as a powerful tool for large-scale, noninvasive investigations of human sleep neurophysiology and brain network dynamics.

Original languageEnglish
Article number121803
JournalNeuroImage
Volume329
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Apr 2026

!!!Keywords

  • Cortical oscillation analysis
  • High-density EEG
  • Normative intracranial EEG
  • Sleep/Wake physiology
  • Source imaging
  • Vigilance states

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