Abstract

The diagnosis of attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is based on the health history and on the evaluation of questionnaires to identify symptoms. This evaluation can be subjective and lengthy, especially in children. Therefore, a biomarker would be of great value to assist mental health professionals in the process of diagnosing ADHD. Event-related potential (ERP) is one of the most informative and dynamic methods of monitoring cognitive processes. Previous works suggested that specific sets of ERP-microstates are selectively affected by ADHD. This paper proposes a new methodology for the ERP-microstate analysis and identification of ADHD patients based on complex networks to model the microstate topographic maps. The analysis of global and local features of ERP-microstate networks revealed topological differences between ADHD and healthy control. The classification using a neural network with a single hidden layer resulted in an average accuracy of 99.72% in binary classification and 99.31% in the classification of ADHD subtypes. The results were compared to the power band spectral densities and the energy of wavelet coefficients. The temporal features of ERP-microstates, such as frequency of occurrence, duration, coverage, and transition probabilities, were also evaluated for comparison proposes. Overall, the selected topological features of ERP-microstate networks derived from the proposed method performed significantly better classification results. The results suggest that topological features of ERP-microstate networks are promising to identify ADHD and its subtypes with a neural network model compared to power band spectrum density, wavelet transform, and temporal features of ERP-microstates.

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