Abstract

ObjectivesComorbid cognitive and behavioral deficits are often observed in patients with epilepsy. It is not clear whether the brain networks of patients with epilepsy without cognitive decline differs from that of healthy controls in different frequency bands in the task-state. The purpose of our study was to explore whether epilepsy affects the structure of brain networks associated with cognitive processing, even when patients with epilepsy do not have cognitive impairment. MethodsWe designed an audiovisual discrimination task and recorded electroencephalogram (EEG) data from healthy controls and patients with epilepsy. We established constructed time-varying brain networks across the delta, theta, alpha, and beta bands on the task-state EEG data during audiovisual integration processing. ResultsThe results showed changes in the structure of the brain networks in the theta, alpha, and beta bands in patients with epilepsy who had no cognitive deficit. No significant difference in the connectivity strength, clustering coefficient, characteristic path length, or global efficiency was noted between patients and healthy controls. Moreover, the structure of brain networks in patients showed no correlation with the behavioral performance. ConclusionThe repeated abnormal firing of neurons in the brain of patients with epilepsy may inhibit it from optimizing networks into more efficient structures. Epilepsy might affect decision-making ability by damaging the neural activity in the beta band and preventing its correlation with decision-making behaviors.

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