Az orvos-, egészségtudományi- és gyógyszerészképzés tudományos műhelyeinek fejlesztése(EFOP-3.6.3-VEKOP-16-2017-00009)
Támogató: EFOP-VEKOP
(121389/DIDIT/2022)
Analysis of brain functional connectivity (FC) could provide insight in how and why
cognitive functions decline even in healthy aging (HA). Despite FC being established
as fluctuating over time even in the resting state (RS), dynamic functional connectivity
(DFC) studies involving healthy elderly individuals and assessing how these patterns
relate to cognitive performance are yet scarce. In our recent study we showed that
fractal temporal scaling of functional connections in RS is not only reduced in HA,
but also predicts increased response latency and reduced task solving accuracy. However,
in that work we did not address changes in the dynamics of fractal connectivity (FrC)
strength itself and its plausible relationship with mental capabilities. Therefore,
here we analyzed RS electroencephalography recordings of the same subject cohort as
previously, consisting of 24 young and 19 healthy elderly individuals, who also completed
7 different cognitive tasks after data collection. Dynamic fractal connectivity (dFrC)
analysis was carried out via sliding-window detrended cross-correlation analysis (DCCA).
A machine learning method based on recursive feature elimination was employed to select
the subset of connections most discriminative between the two age groups, identifying
56 connections that allowed for classifying participants with an accuracy surpassing
92%. Mean of DCCA was found generally increased, while temporal variability of FrC
decreased in the elderly when compared to the young group. Finally, dFrC indices expressed
an elaborate pattern of associations-assessed via Spearman correlation-with cognitive
performance scores in both groups, linking fractal connectivity strength and variance
to increased response latency and reduced accuracy in the elderly population. Our
results provide further support for the relevance of FrC dynamics in understanding
age-related cognitive decline and might help to identify potential targets for future
intervention strategies.