AUTHORS: Carboni M, Brunet D, Seeber M, Michel CM, Vulliemoz S, Vorderwülbecke BJ

Clinical Neurophysiology, 133: 58-67, January 2022


ABSTRACT

Objective

To compare the spatial accuracy of 6 linear distributed inverse solutions for EEG source localisation of interictal epileptic discharges: Minimum Norm, Weighted Minimum Norm, Low-Resolution Electromagnetic Tomography (LORETA), Local Autoregressive Average (LAURA), Standardised LORETA, and Exact LORETA.

Methods

Spatial accuracy was assessed clinically by retrospectively comparing the maximum source of averaged interictal discharges to the resected brain area in 30 patients with successful epilepsy surgery, based on 204-channel EEG. Additionally, localisation errors of the inverse solutions were assessed in computer simulations, with different levels of noise added to the signal in both sensor space and source space.

Results

In the clinical evaluations, the source maximum was located inside the resected brain area in 50–57% of patients when using LORETA or LAURA, while all other inverse solutions performed significantly worse (17–30%; corrected p < 0.01). In the simulation studies, when noise levels exceeded 10%, LORETA and LAURA had substantially smaller localisation errors than the other inverse solutions.

Conclusions

LORETA and LAURA provided the highest spatial accuracy both in clinical and simulated data, alongside with a comparably high robustness towards noise.

Significance

Among the different linear inverse solution algorithms tested, LORETA and LAURA might be preferred for interictal EEG source localisation.

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