The amplitude of low-frequency fluctuation (ALFF) describes the regional intensity of spontaneous blood-oxygen-level-dependent signal in resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). How the fMRI-ALFF relates to the amplitude in electrophysiological… Click to show full abstract
The amplitude of low-frequency fluctuation (ALFF) describes the regional intensity of spontaneous blood-oxygen-level-dependent signal in resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). How the fMRI-ALFF relates to the amplitude in electrophysiological signals remains unclear. We here aimed to investigate the neural correlates of fMRI-ALFF by comparing the spatial difference of amplitude between the eyes-closed (EC) and eyes-open (EO) states from fMRI and magnetoencephalography (MEG), respectively. By synthesizing MEG signal into amplitude-based envelope time course, we first investigated 2 types of amplitude in MEG, meaning the amplitude of neural activities from delta to gamma (i.e. MEG-amplitude) and the amplitude of their low-frequency modulation at the fMRI range (i.e. MEG-ALFF). We observed that the MEG-ALFF in EC was increased at parietal sensors, ranging from alpha to beta; whereas the MEG-amplitude in EC was increased at the occipital sensors in alpha. Source-level analysis revealed that the increased MEG-ALFF in the sensorimotor cortex overlapped with the most reliable EC-EO differences observed in fMRI at slow-3 (0.073-0.198 Hz), and these differences were more significant after global mean standardization. Taken together, our results support that (i) the amplitude at 2 timescales in MEG reflect distinct physiological information and that (ii) the fMRI-ALFF may relate to the ALFF in neural activity.
               
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