RT Journal Article T1 Event-related desynchronization during movement attempt and execution in severely paralyzed stroke patients: An artifact removal relevance analysis: An artifact removal relevance analysis A1 López-Larraz, Eduardo A1 Figueiredo, Thiago C. A1 Insausti-Delgado, Ainhoa A1 Ziemann, Ulf A1 Birbaumer, Niels A1 Ramos-Murguialday, Ander AB The electroencephalogram (EEG) constitutes a relevant tool to study neural dynamics and to develop brain-machine interfaces (BMI) for rehabilitation of patients with paralysis due to stroke. However, the EEG is easily contaminated by artifacts of physiological origin, which can pollute the measured cortical activity and bias the interpretations of such data. This is especially relevant when recording EEG of stroke patients while they try to move their paretic limbs, since they generate more artifacts due to compensatory activity. In this paper, we study how physiological artifacts (i.e., eye movements, motion artifacts, muscle artifacts and compensatory movements with the other limb) can affect EEG activity of stroke patients. Data from 31 severely paralyzed stroke patients performing/attempting grasping movements with their healthy/paralyzed hand were analyzed offline. We estimated the cortical activation as the event-related desynchronization (ERD) of sensorimotor rhythms and used it to detect the movements with a pseudo-online simulated BMI. Automated state-of-the-art methods (linear regression to remove ocular contaminations and statistical thresholding to reject the other types of artifacts) were used to minimize the influence of artifacts. The effect of artifact reduction was quantified in terms of ERD and BMI performance. The results reveal a significant contamination affecting the EEG, being involuntary muscle activity the main source of artifacts. Artifact reduction helped extracting the oscillatory signatures of motor tasks, isolating relevant information from noise and revealing a more prominent ERD activity. Lower BMI performances were obtained when artifacts were eliminated from the training datasets. This suggests that artifacts produce an optimistic bias that improves theoretical accuracy but may result in a poor link between task-related oscillatory activity and BMI peripheral feedback. With a clinically relevant dataset of stroke patients, we evidence the need of appropriate methodologies to remove artifacts from EEG datasets to obtain accurate estimations of the motor brain activity. SN 2213-1582 YR 2018 FD 2018 LA eng NO López-Larraz , E , Figueiredo , T C , Insausti-Delgado , A , Ziemann , U , Birbaumer , N & Ramos-Murguialday , A 2018 , ' Event-related desynchronization during movement attempt and execution in severely paralyzed stroke patients: An artifact removal relevance analysis : An artifact removal relevance analysis ' , NeuroImage: Clinical , vol. 20 , pp. 972-986 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nicl.2018.09.035 NO Publisher Copyright: © 2018 The Authors DS TECNALIA Publications RD 25 jul 2024