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Global Dimensional Complexity of Multichannel EEG in Mild Alzheimer's Disease and Age-Matched Cohorts
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1997
Year
NeuropsychologyBrain FunctionNeurophysiological BiomarkersLongitudinal NeuroimagingSocial SciencesAlzheimer's DiseaseGlobal Dimensional ComplexityGlobal Correlation DimensionCognitive ElectrophysiologyNeurologyCognitive NeuroscienceNeuropsychological FunctioningCognitive ScienceMultichannel EegNeuroimagingNeuroimaging BiomarkersDementiaEeg Signal ProcessingNeuroscienceMedicineMild Alzheimer
Multichannel EEG as sequence of momentary brain field maps constitutes a trajectory through K-dimensional state space (K = number of channels); the complexity of this trajectory is assessed by the nonlinear measure of global correlation dimension (Global Dimensional Complexity, GDC) with the number of electrodes as embedding dimension. We analyzed eyes-closed EEG of three age-matched subject groups: mild Alzheimer's disease (AD; n = 21), mild cognitive impairment (29) and subjective memory complaint (29). Kruskal-Wallis statistics showed an overall effect between groups. AD patients differed significantly (GDC = 4.56) from mild cognitive impairments (GDC = 4.98) and from subjective memory complaints (GDC = 4.93). GDC also had significant positive correlations with mental condition and performance (MMSE and WAIS-R scores). Thus, the dynamics of brain state development over time in mild AD differs from that in mild cognitive impairment and in subjective memory complaint cases.