Abstract

Functional connectivity (FC) between different cortical regions of the brain has long been hypothesized to be necessary for conscious states in several modeling and empirical studies. The work presented herein estimates the FC between two bipolar midline electroencephalogram (EEG) recordings to evaluate its utility in discriminating consciousness levels across wakefulness and sleep. Consciousness levels were defined as Low, Medium, and High depending upon the ability of a subject to self-report their experiences at a later stage. The sleep EDF [expanded] dataset available in the Physionet data repository was used for analyses. FC was estimated using the debiased estimator of the squared Weighted Phase Lag Index (dWPLI2) metric. A total of 40 features extracted from the FC spectra for 10 EEG sub-bands were considered. FC trends demonstrated the highest alpha synchrony in the 'Low' conscious state. While the 'Medium' conscious state demonstrated superior phase synchronization in the low-gamma band, the 'High' conscious state was characterized by comparatively lower phase synchronization in all frequency bands. A Multi-Layer Perceptron (MLP) framework using a combination of 7 features yielded the highest cross-validation accuracy of 95.15% in distinguishing these conscious states. The study results provide a pertinent validation for the hypothesis that midline EEG FC is a reliable and robust signature of conscious states in sleep and wakefulness.

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