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Journal article

Value and limitations of intracranial recordings for validating electric field modeling for transcranial brain stimulation

In Neuroimage 2020, Volume 208, pp. 116431
From

Department of Health Technology, Technical University of Denmark1

Danish Research Centre for Magnetic Resonance2

Magnetic Resonance, Department of Health Technology, Technical University of Denmark3

Cognitive Systems, Department of Applied Mathematics and Computer Science, Technical University of Denmark4

Department of Applied Mathematics and Computer Science, Technical University of Denmark5

Comparing electric field simulations from individualized head models against in-vivo intra-cranial recordings is considered the gold standard for direct validation of computational field modeling for transcranial brain stimulation and brain mapping techniques such as electro- and magnetoencephalography.

The measurements also help to improve simulation accuracy by pinning down the factors having the largest influence on the simulations. Here we compare field simulations from four different automated pipelines against intracranial voltage recordings in an existing dataset of 14 epilepsy patients. We show that modeling differences in the pipelines lead to notable differences in the simulated electric field distributions that are often large enough to change the conclusions regarding the dose distribution and strength in the brain.

Specifically, differences in the automatic segmentations of the head anatomy from structural magnetic resonance images are a major factor contributing to the observed field differences. However, the differences in the simulated fields are not reflected in the comparison between the simulations and intra-cranial measurements.

This apparent mismatch is partly explained by the noisiness of the intra-cranial measurements, which renders comparisons between the methods inconclusive. We further demonstrate that a standard regression analysis, which ignores uncertainties in the simulations, leads to a strong bias in the estimated linear relationship between simulated and measured fields.

Ignoring this bias leads to the incorrect conclusion that the models systematically misestimate the field strength in the brain. We propose a new Bayesian regression analysis of the data that yields unbiased parameter estimates, along with their uncertainties, and gives further insights to the fit between simulations and measurements.

Specifically, the unbiased results give only weak support for systematic misestimations of the fields by the models.

Language: English
Publisher: Elsevier
Year: 2020
Pages: 116431
ISSN: 10959572 and 10538119
Types: Journal article
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2019.116431
ORCIDs: Puonti, Oula , Saturnino, Guilherme B. , Madsen, Kristoffer H. and Thielscher, Axel

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