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EEG frequency band sloreta sources during mental arithmetic compared to resting

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 April 2020

A. Theodoropoulou
Affiliation:
The KEY Institute for Brain-Mind Research, University Hospital of Psychiatry, Zurich, Switzerland
S. Tei
Affiliation:
The KEY Institute for Brain-Mind Research, University Hospital of Psychiatry, Zurich, Switzerland
D. Lehmann
Affiliation:
The KEY Institute for Brain-Mind Research, University Hospital of Psychiatry, Zurich, Switzerland
P.L. Faber
Affiliation:
The KEY Institute for Brain-Mind Research, University Hospital of Psychiatry, Zurich, Switzerland
F. Schlegel
Affiliation:
The KEY Institute for Brain-Mind Research, University Hospital of Psychiatry, Zurich, Switzerland
P. Milz
Affiliation:
The KEY Institute for Brain-Mind Research, University Hospital of Psychiatry, Zurich, Switzerland

Abstract

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Introduction

Arithmetic reportedly involves left parietal areas.

Objectives

To test this in independent groups of healthy persons.

Aims

Which brain regions are activated / inhibited during mental arithmetic compared to task-free resting?

Methods

We examined four independent groups of healthy adults (N = 15, 14, 14, 23, respectively) during simple arithmetic (continuous subtraction of 7) and task-free resting before and after arithmetic, all with closed eyes. Multichannel head surface EEG (19–58 channels) was continually recorded, then recomputed (using sLORETA functional tomography) into current density for 6239 cortical voxels, for each of the eight EEG frequency bands (delta through gamma, 1.5–44 Hz). Pre- and post-arithmetic resting was averaged. Using paired t-tests, frequency band-wise normalized and log-transformed current density was compared between arithmetic and resting for each group. The resulting p-values were combined across groups using Fisher’s combination procedure. For each frequency band, sLORETA voxels differing between conditions at Fisher’s (across groups) p < 0.05 were computed into centers of gravity separately for increased and decreased activation.

Results

Activity that was stronger during arithmetic compared to resting had gravity centers in midline anterior regions for slow frequency bands (delta, theta, alpha-1) and in right posterior regions for fast frequency bands (alpha-2 through gamma). Activity that was weaker during arithmetic compared to resting was centered around left parietal areas for all eight frequency bands.

Conclusions

The results suggest that arithmetic compared to resting involves frontal inhibition coupled with increased right parietal activation, and left parietal reduced facilitatory and reduced inhibitory activity.

Type
P02-349
Copyright
Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 2011
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