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    Using distance on the Riemannian manifold to compare representations in brain and in models

    , Article NeuroImage ; Volume 239 , 2021 ; 10538119 (ISSN) Shahbazi, M ; Shirali, A ; Aghajan, H ; Nili, H ; Sharif University of Technology
    Academic Press Inc  2021
    Abstract
    Representational similarity analysis (RSA) summarizes activity patterns for a set of experimental conditions into a matrix composed of pairwise comparisons between activity patterns. Two examples of such matrices are the condition-by-condition inner product and correlation matrix. These representational matrices reside on the manifold of positive semidefinite matrices, called the Riemannian manifold. We hypothesize that representational similarities would be more accurately quantified by considering the underlying manifold of the representational matrices. Thus, we introduce the distance on the Riemannian manifold as a metric for comparing representations. Analyzing simulated and real fMRI... 

    Toward epileptic brain region detection based on magnetic nanoparticle patterning

    , Article Sensors (Switzerland) ; Volume 15, Issue 9 , September , 2015 , Pages 24409-24427 ; 14248220 (ISSN) Pedram, M. Z ; Shamloo, A ; Alasty, A ; Ghafar Zadeh, E ; Sharif University of Technology
    MDPI AG  2015
    Abstract
    Resection of the epilepsy foci is the best treatment for more than 15% of epileptic patients or 50% of patients who are refractory to all forms of medical treatment. Accurate mapping of the locations of epileptic neuronal networks can result in the complete resection of epileptic foci. Even though currently electroencephalography is the best technique for mapping the epileptic focus, it cannot define the boundary of epilepsy that accurately. Herein we put forward a new accurate brain mapping technique using superparamagnetic nanoparticles (SPMNs). The main hypothesis in this new approach is the creation of super-paramagnetic aggregates in the epileptic foci due to high electrical and... 

    The 2017 and 2018 Iranian Brain-Computer interface competitions

    , Article Journal of Medical Signals and Sensors ; Volume 10, Issue 3 , 2020 , Pages 208-216 Aghdam, N ; Moradi, M ; Shamsollahi, M ; Nasrabadi, A ; Setarehdan, S ; Shalchyan, V ; Faradji, F ; Makkiabadi, B ; Sharif University of Technology
    Isfahan University of Medical Sciences(IUMS)  2020
    Abstract
    This article summarizes the first and second Iranian brain-computer interface competitions held in 2017 and 2018 by the National Brain Mapping Lab. Two 64-channel electroencephalography (EEG) datasets were contributed, including motor imagery as well as motor execution by three limbs. The competitors were asked to classify the type of motor imagination or execution based on EEG signals in the first competition and the type of executed motion as well as the movement onset in the second competition. Here, we provide an overview of the datasets, the tasks, the evaluation criteria, and the methods proposed by the top-ranked teams. We also report the results achieved with the submitted algorithms... 

    Synchronization of EEG: Bivariate and multivariate measures

    , Article IEEE Transactions on Neural Systems and Rehabilitation Engineering ; Vol. 22, Issue. 2 , 2014 , pp. 212-221 ; ISSN: 1534-4320 Jalili, M ; Barzegaran, E ; Knyazeva, M. G ; Sharif University of Technology
    Abstract
    Synchronization behavior of electroencephalographic (EEG) signals is important for decoding information processing in the human brain. Modern multichannel EEG allows a transition from traditional measurements of synchronization in pairs of EEG signals to whole-brain synchronization maps. The latter can be based on bivariate measures (BM) via averaging over pair-wise values or, alternatively, on multivariate measures (MM), which directly ascribe a single value to the synchronization in a group. In order to compare BM versus MM, we applied nine different estimators to simulated multivariate time series with known parameters and to real EEGs. We found widespread correlations between BM and MM,... 

    Synchronizability of EEG-based functional networks in early alzheimer's disease

    , Article IEEE Transactions on Neural Systems and Rehabilitation Engineering ; Volume 20, Issue 5 , 2012 , Pages 636-641 ; 15344320 (ISSN) Tahaei, M. S ; Jalili, M ; Knyazeva, M. G ; Sharif University of Technology
    IEEE  2012
    Abstract
    Recently graph theory and complex networks have been widely used as a mean to model functionality of the brain. Among different neuroimaging techniques available for constructing the brain functional networks, electroencephalography (EEG) with its high temporal resolution is a useful instrument of the analysis of functional interdependencies between different brain regions. Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a neurodegenerative disease, which leads to substantial cognitive decline, and eventually, dementia in aged people. To achieve a deeper insight into the behavior of functional cerebral networks in AD, here we study their synchronizability in 17 newly diagnosed AD patients compared to 17 healthy... 

    Psychogenic seizures and frontal disconnection: EEG synchronisation study

    , Article Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery and Psychiatry ; Volume 82, Issue 5 , 2011 , Pages 505-511 ; 00223050 (ISSN) Knyazeva, M. G ; Jalili, M ; Frackowiak, R. S ; Rossetti, A. O ; Sharif University of Technology
    2011
    Abstract
    Objective Psychogenic non-epileptic seizures (PNES) are paroxysmal events that, in contrast to epileptic seizures, are related to psychological causes without the presence of epileptiform EEG changes. Recent models suggest a multifactorial basis for PNES. A potentially paramount, but currently poorly understood factor is the interplay between psychiatric features and a specific vulnerability of the brain leading to a clinical picture that resembles epilepsy. Hypothesising that functional cerebral network abnormalities may predispose to the clinical phenotype, the authors undertook a characterisation of the functional connectivity in PNES patients. Methods The authors analysed the whole-head... 

    Joint, partially-joint, and individual independent component analysis in multi-subject fMRI data

    , Article IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering ; Volume 67, Issue 7 , 2020 , Pages 1969-1981 Pakravan, M ; Shamsollahi, M. B ; Sharif University of Technology
    IEEE Computer Society  2020
    Abstract
    Objective: Joint analysis of multi-subject brain imaging datasets has wide applications in biomedical engineering. In these datasets, some sources belong to all subjects (joint), a subset of subjects (partially-joint), or a single subject (individual). In this paper, this source model is referred to as joint/partially-joint/individual multiple datasets unidimensional (JpJI-MDU), and accordingly, a source extraction method is developed. Method: We present a deflation-based algorithm utilizing higher order cumulants to analyze the JpJI-MDU source model. The algorithm maximizes a cost function which leads to an eigenvalue problem solved with thin-SVD (singular value decomposition)... 

    Gustatory cortex is involved in evidence accumulation during food choice

    , Article eNeuro ; Volume 9, Issue 3 , 2022 ; 23732822 (ISSN) Ataei, A ; Amini, A ; Ghazizadeh, A ; Sharif University of Technology
    Society for Neuroscience  2022
    Abstract
    Food choice is one of the most fundamental and most frequent value-based decisions for all animals including humans. However, the neural circuitry involved in food-based decisions is only recently being addressed. Given the relatively fast dynamics of decision formation, electroencephalography (EEG)-informed fMRI analysis is highly beneficial for localizing this circuitry in humans. Here, by using the EEG correlates of evidence accumulation in a simultaneously recorded EEG-fMRI dataset, we found a significant role for the right temporal-parietal operculum (PO) and medial insula including gustatory cortex (GC) in binary choice between food items. These activations were uncovered by using the... 

    Findings of DTI-p maps in comparison with T 2 /T 2 -FLAIR to assess postoperative hyper-signal abnormal regions in patients with glioblastoma 08 Information and Computing Sciences 0801 Artificial Intelligence and Image Processing

    , Article Cancer Imaging ; Volume 18, Issue 1 , 2018 ; 14707330 (ISSN) Beigi, M ; Safari, M ; Ameri, A ; Shojaee Moghadam, M ; Arbabi, A ; Tabatabaeefar, M ; Salighehrad, H ; Sharif University of Technology
    BioMed Central Ltd  2018
    Abstract
    Purpose: The aim of this study was to compare diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) isotropic map (p-map) with current radiographically (T 2/T 2 -FLAIR) methods based on abnormal hyper-signal size and location of glioblastoma tumor using a semi-automatic approach. Materials and methods: Twenty-five patients with biopsy-proved diagnosis of glioblastoma participated in this study. T 2, T 2 -FLAIR images and diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) were acquired 1 week before radiotherapy. Hyper-signal regions on T 2, T 2 -FLAIR and DTI p-map were segmented by means of semi-automated segmentation. Manual segmentation was used as ground truth. Dice Scores (DS) were calculated for validation of semiautomatic... 

    Extending concepts of mapping of human brain to artificial intelligence and neural networks

    , Article Scientia Iranica ; Volume 28, Issue 3 D , 2021 , Pages 1529-1534 ; 10263098 (ISSN) Joghataie, A ; Sharif University of Technology
    Sharif University of Technology  2021
    Abstract
    This paper introduces the concept of mapping of Artificially Intelligent (AI) computational systems. The concept of homunculus from human neurophysiology is extended to AI systems. It is assumed that an AI system behaves similarly to a mini-column or ganglion in the natural animal brain that comprises a layer of afferent (input) neurons, a number of interconnecting processing cells, and a layer of efferent (output) neurons or organs. The objective of the present study was to identify the correlation between the stimulus to each afferent neuron and the corresponding response from each efferent organ when the intelligent system is subjected to certain stimuli. To clarify the general concept, a... 

    Estimation of effective brain connectivity with dual kalman filter and EEG source localization methods

    , Article Australasian Physical and Engineering Sciences in Medicine ; Volume 40, Issue 3 , 2017 , Pages 675-686 ; 01589938 (ISSN) Rajabioun, M ; Motie Nasrabadi, A ; Shamsollahi, M. B ; Sharif University of Technology
    Abstract
    Effective connectivity is one of the most important considerations in brain functional mapping via EEG. It demonstrates the effects of a particular active brain region on others. In this paper, a new method is proposed which is based on dual Kalman filter. In this method, firstly by using a brain active localization method (standardized low resolution brain electromagnetic tomography) and applying it to EEG signal, active regions are extracted, and appropriate time model (multivariate autoregressive model) is fitted to extracted brain active sources for evaluating the activity and time dependence between sources. Then, dual Kalman filter is used to estimate model parameters or effective... 

    Effective brain connectivity estimation between active brain regions in autism using the dual Kalman-based method

    , Article Biomedizinische Technik ; Volume 65, Issue 1 , 2020 , Pages 23-32 Rajabioun, M ; Motie Nasrabadi, A ; Shamsollahi, M. B ; Coben, R ; Sharif University of Technology
    De Gruyter  2020
    Abstract
    Brain connectivity estimation is a useful method to study brain functions and diagnose neuroscience disorders. Effective connectivity is a subdivision of brain connectivity which discusses the causal relationship between different parts of the brain. In this study, a dual Kalman-based method is used for effective connectivity estimation. Because of connectivity changes in autism, the method is applied to autistic signals for effective connectivity estimation. For method validation, the dual Kalman based method is compared with other connectivity estimation methods by estimation error and the dual Kalman-based method gives acceptable results with less estimation errors. Then, connectivities... 

    EEG-based functional networks in schizophrenia

    , Article Computers in Biology and Medicine ; Volume 41, Issue 12 , 2011 , Pages 1178-1186 ; 00104825 (ISSN) Jalili, M ; Knyazeva, M. G ; Sharif University of Technology
    2011
    Abstract
    Schizophrenia is often considered as a dysconnection syndrome in which, abnormal interactions between large-scale functional brain networks result in cognitive and perceptual deficits. In this article we apply the graph theoretic measures to brain functional networks based on the resting EEGs of fourteen schizophrenic patients in comparison with those of fourteen matched control subjects. The networks were extracted from common-average-referenced EEG time-series through partial and unpartial cross-correlation methods. Unpartial correlation detects functional connectivity based on direct and/or indirect links, while partial correlation allows one to ignore indirect links. We quantified the... 

    EEG-based functional brain networks: does the network size matter?

    , Article PloS one ; Volume 7, Issue 4 , 2012 ; 19326203 (ISSN) Joudaki, A ; Salehi, N ; Jalili, M ; Knyazeva, M. G ; Sharif University of Technology
    PLOS  2012
    Abstract
    Functional connectivity in human brain can be represented as a network using electroencephalography (EEG) signals. These networks--whose nodes can vary from tens to hundreds--are characterized by neurobiologically meaningful graph theory metrics. This study investigates the degree to which various graph metrics depend upon the network size. To this end, EEGs from 32 normal subjects were recorded and functional networks of three different sizes were extracted. A state-space based method was used to calculate cross-correlation matrices between different brain regions. These correlation matrices were used to construct binary adjacency connectomes, which were assessed with regards to a number of... 

    Directed functional networks in Alzheimer's disease: disruption of global and local connectivity measures

    , Article IEEE Journal of Biomedical and Health Informatics ; Volume 21, Issue 4 , 2017 , Pages 949-955 ; 21682194 (ISSN) Afshari, S ; Jalili, M ; Sharif University of Technology
    Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc  2017
    Abstract
    Techniques available in graph theory can be applied to signals recorded from human brain. In network analysis of EEG signals, the individual nodes are EEG sensor locations and the edges correspond to functional relations between them that are extracted from EEG time series. In this paper, we study EEG-based directed functional networks in Alzheimer's disease (AD). To this end, directed connectivity matrices of 25 AD patients and 26 healthy subjects are processed and a number of meaningful graph theory metrics are studied. Our data show that functional networks of AD brains have significantly reduced global connectivity in alpha and beta bands (P < 0.05). The AD brains have significantly... 

    Deep sparse graph functional connectivity analysis in AD patients using fMRI data

    , Article Computer Methods and Programs in Biomedicine ; Volume 201 , 2021 ; 01692607 (ISSN) Ahmadi, H ; Fatemizadeh, E ; Motie Nasrabadi, A ; Sharif University of Technology
    Elsevier Ireland Ltd  2021
    Abstract
    Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) is a non-invasive method that helps to analyze brain function based on BOLD signal fluctuations. Functional Connectivity (FC) catches the transient relationship between various brain regions usually measured by correlation analysis. The elements of the correlation matrix are between -1 to 1. Some of them are very small values usually related to weak and spurious correlations due to noises and artifacts. They can not be concluded as real strong correlations between brain regions and their existence could make a misconception and leads to fake results. It is crucial to make a conclusion based on reliable and informative correlations. In order to... 

    Deep sparse graph functional connectivity analysis in AD patients using fMRI data

    , Article Computer Methods and Programs in Biomedicine ; Volume 201 , 2021 ; 01692607 (ISSN) Ahmadi, H ; Fatemizadeh, E ; Motie Nasrabadi, A ; Sharif University of Technology
    Elsevier Ireland Ltd  2021
    Abstract
    Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) is a non-invasive method that helps to analyze brain function based on BOLD signal fluctuations. Functional Connectivity (FC) catches the transient relationship between various brain regions usually measured by correlation analysis. The elements of the correlation matrix are between -1 to 1. Some of them are very small values usually related to weak and spurious correlations due to noises and artifacts. They can not be concluded as real strong correlations between brain regions and their existence could make a misconception and leads to fake results. It is crucial to make a conclusion based on reliable and informative correlations. In order to... 

    Coordinated multivoxel coding beyond univariate effects is not likely to be observable in fMRI data

    , Article NeuroImage ; Volume 247 , 2022 ; 10538119 (ISSN) Pakravan, M ; Abbaszadeh, M ; Ghazizadeh, A ; Sharif University of Technology
    Academic Press Inc  2022
    Abstract
    Simultaneous recording of activity across brain regions can contain additional information compared to regional recordings done in isolation. In particular, multivariate pattern analysis (MVPA) across voxels has been interpreted as evidence for distributed coding of cognitive or sensorimotor processes beyond what can be gleaned from a collection of univariate effects (UVE) using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Here, we argue that regardless of patterns revealed, conventional MVPA is merely a decoding tool with increased sensitivity arising from considering a large number of ‘weak classifiers’ (i.e., single voxels) in higher dimensions. We propose instead that ‘real’ multivoxel... 

    Constructing brain functional networks from EEG: Partial and unpartial correlations

    , Article Journal of Integrative Neuroscience ; Volume 10, Issue 2 , 2011 , Pages 213-232 ; 02196352 (ISSN) Jalili, M ; Knyazeva, M. G ; Sharif University of Technology
    Abstract
    We consider electroencephalograms (EEGs) of healthy individuals and compare the properties of the brain functional networks found through two methods: unpartialized and partialized cross-correlations. The networks obtained by partial correlations are fundamentally different from those constructed through unpartial correlations in terms of graph metrics. In particular, they have completely different connection efficiency, clustering coefficient, assortativity, degree variability, and synchronization properties. Unpartial correlations are simple to compute and they can be easily applied to large-scale systems, yet they cannot prevent the prediction of non-direct edges. In contrast, partial... 

    Complementary hemispheric lateralization of language and social processing in the human brain

    , Article Cell Reports ; Volume 41, Issue 6 , 2022 ; 22111247 (ISSN) Rajimehr, R ; Firoozi, A ; Rafipoor, H ; Abbasi, N ; Duncan, J ; Sharif University of Technology
    Elsevier B.V  2022
    Abstract
    Humans have a unique ability to use language for social communication. The neural architecture for language comprehension and production may have prominently emerged in the brain areas that were originally involved in social cognition. Here, we directly tested the fundamental link between language and social processing using functional magnetic resonance data (MRI) data from over 1,000 human subjects. Cortical activations in language and social tasks showed a striking similarity with a complementary hemispheric lateralization. Within core language areas, left-lateralized activations in the language task were mirrored by right-lateralized activations in the social task. Outside these areas,...