Title Microstate in rats’ EEG: a proof of concept study
Authors Piorecka, Vaclava ; Vejmola, Cestmir ; Peskova, Petra ; Piorecky, Marek ; Jiricek, Stanislav ; Koudelka, Vlastimil ; Griškova-Bulanova, Inga ; Palenicek, Tomas
DOI 10.1038/s41398-025-03702-y
Full Text Download
Is Part of Translational psychiatry.. London : Springer Nature. 2025, vol. 15, art. no. 494, p. [1-10].. eISSN 2158-3188
Keywords [eng] EEG microstates ; neural activity ; preclinical brain research
Abstract [eng] The electroencephalogram (EEG) reflecting brain activity may be characterised through brief periods of stable neural activity patterns that recur over time and are referred to as microstates. Microstates are related to a range of cognitive processes, and their analysis has become an increasingly popular tool for studying human brain function. While microstates have been extensively studied in humans, their presence and characteristics in animal models have yet to be as thoroughly investigated. This study aims to address this gap by detecting and characterising microstates in EEGs of rats collected using a superficial electrode system corresponding to homological areas of the human 10–20 system. Specifically, we demonstrate the presence of microstates in rats’ EEGs, i.e., those that may be captured by the same metrics as in humans. We identified five microstate EEG maps in rats, explaining 71% of the variance in our dataset (N = 30). The explained variance, mean temporal coverage values (0.2), and average duration (0.26 s) are comparable to the human-derived EEG microstates. Via a source localisation technique, the cingulate cortex, precuneus, and insula were found to be associated with the microstates’ temporal dynamics. Among the microstates that showed a broadband character, we also found those that showed an association with the theta and alpha bands. These findings have important implications for the use of microstates as a preclinical tool for investigating brain functions, detecting new biomarkers of brain diseases, and translating this knowledge to humans.
Published London : Springer Nature
Type Journal article
Language English
Publication date 2025
CC license CC license description