PHASE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN LOW-FREQUENCY OSCILLATIONS OF CEREBRAL DEOXY- AND OXY-HEMOGLOBIN CONCENTRATIONS DURING A MENTAL TASK.

Hemodynamic low-frequency (~0.1 Hz) spontaneous oscillations as detected in the brain by near-infrared spectroscopy have potential applications in the study of brain activation, cerebral autoregulation, and functional connectivity. In this work, we have investigated the phase lag between oscillations of cerebral deoxy- and oxy-hemoglobin concentrations in the frequency range 0.05-0.10 Hz in a human subject during a mental workload task. We have obtained a measure of such phase lag using two different methods: (1) phase synchronization analysis as used in the theory of chaotic oscillators and (2) a novel cross-correlation phasor approach. The two methods yielded comparable initial results of a larger phase lag between low-frequency oscillations of deoxy- and oxy-hemoglobin concentrations during mental workload with respect to a control, rest condition.

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