Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.3389/fnhum.2016.00304
Title: Mid-task break improves global integration of functional connectivity in lower alpha band
Authors: Li, J 
Lim, J 
Chen, Y 
Wong, K 
Thakor, N 
Bezerianos, A 
Sun, Y 
Keywords: adult
Article
connectome
electroencephalogram
female
human
human experiment
inverse efficiency score
male
measurement accuracy
mid task break
nervous system parameters
phase lag index
scoring system
task performance
Issue Date: 2016
Publisher: Frontiers Media S. A
Citation: Li, J, Lim, J, Chen, Y, Wong, K, Thakor, N, Bezerianos, A, Sun, Y (2016). Mid-task break improves global integration of functional connectivity in lower alpha band. Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 10 : 304. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.3389/fnhum.2016.00304
Abstract: Numerous efforts have been devoted to revealing neurophysiological mechanisms of mental fatigue, aiming to find an effective way to reduce the undesirable fatigue-related outcomes. Until recently, mental fatigue is thought to be related to functional dysconnectivity among brain regions. However, the topological representation of brain functional connectivity altered by mental fatigue is only beginning to be revealed. In the current study, we applied a graph theoretical approach to analyse such topological alterations in the lower alpha band (8~10 Hz) of EEG data from 20 subjects undergoing a two-session experiment, in which one session includes four successive blocks with visual oddball tasks (session 1) whereas a mid-task break was introduced in the middle of four task blocks in the other session (session 2). Phase lag index (PLI) was then employed to measure functional connectivity strengths for all pairs of EEG channels. Behavior and connectivity maps were compared between the first and last task blocks in both sessions. Inverse efficiency scores (IES = reaction time/response accuracy) were significantly increased in the last task block, showing a clear effect of time-on-task in participants. Furthermore, a significant block-by-session interaction was revealed in the IES, suggesting the effectiveness of the mid-task break on maintaining task performance. More importantly, a significant session-independent deficit of global integration and an increase of local segregation were found in the last task block across both sessions, providing further support for the presence of a reshaped topology in functional brain connectivity networks under fatigue state. Moreover, a significant block-by-session interaction was revealed in the characteristic path length, small-worldness, and global efficiency, attributing to the significantly disrupted network topology in session 1 in comparison of the maintained network structure in session 2. Specifically, we found increased nodal betweenness centrality in several channels resided in frontal regions in session 1, resembling the observations of more segregated global architecture under fatigue state. Taken together, our findings provide insights into the substrates of brain functional dysconnectivity patterns for mental fatigue and reiterate the effectiveness of the mid-task break on maintaining brain network efficiency. © 2016 Li, Lim, Chen, Wong, Thakor, Bezerianos and Sun.
Source Title: Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/174254
ISSN: 16625161
DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2016.00304
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