Abstract

Numerous brain oscillations are well organized into several brain rhythms to support complex brain activities within distinct frequency bands. These rhythms temporally coexist in the same or different brain areas and may interact with each other with specific properties and physiological functions. However, the identification and evaluation of these various brain rhythms derived from BOLD-fMRI signals are obscure. To address this issue, we introduced a data-driven method named Complementary Ensemble Empirical Mode Decomposition (CEEMD) to automatically decompose the BOLD oscillations into several brain rhythms within distinct frequency bands. Thereafter, in order to evaluate the performance of CEEMD in the detection of subtle BOLD signals, a novel CEEMD-based high-dimensional pattern classification framework was proposed to accurately identify mild cognitive impairment individuals from the healthy controls. Our results showed CEEMD is a stable frequency decomposition method. Furthermore, CEEMD-based frequency specific topological profiles provided a classification accuracy of 93.33%, which was saliently higher than that of the conventional frequency separation based scheme. Importantly, our findings demonstrated that CEEMD could provide an effective means for brain oscillation separation, by which a more meaningful frequency bins could be used to detect the subtle changes embedded in the BOLD signals.

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