Abstract

Although analyzing the brain's functional and structural network has revealed that numerous brain networks are necessary to collaborate during deception, the directionality of these functional networks is still unknown. This study investigated the effective connectivity of the brain networks during deception and uncovers the information-interaction patterns of lying neural oscillations. The electroencephalography (EEG) data of 40 lying persons and 40 honest persons were used to create the weight- directed functional brain networks (WDFBN). Specifically, the connecting edge weight was defined based on the normalized phase transfer entropy (dPTE) between each electrode pair, where the network nodes involved 30 electrode channels. Additionally, the signal connectivity matrices were constructed in four frequency bands: delta, theta, alpha, and beta and were subjected to a difference analysis of entropy values between the groups. Statistical analysis of the classification results revealed that all frequency bands correctly detect deception and innocence with an accuracy of 92.83%, 94.17%, 85.93%, and 92.25%, respectively. Therefore, dPTE can be considered a valuable feature for identifying lying. According to WDFBN analysis, deception has stronger information flow in the frontoparietal, frontotemporal and temporoparietal networks compare to honest people. Furthermore, the prefrontal cortex was also found to be activated in all frequency ranges. This study examined the critical pathways of brain information interaction during deception, providing new insights into the underlying neural mechanisms. Our analysis offers significant evidence for the development of brain networks that could potentially be used for lie detection.

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