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An Internet-Based Real-Time Audiovisual Link for Dual MEG Recordings

Authors :
University of Helsinki, BioMag Laboratory
Zhdanov, Andrey
Nurminen, Jussi
Baess, Pamela
Hirvenkari, Lotta
Jousmaki, Veikko
Makela, Jyrki P.
Mandel, Anne
Meronen, Lassi
Hari, Riitta
Parkkonen, Lauri
University of Helsinki, BioMag Laboratory
Zhdanov, Andrey
Nurminen, Jussi
Baess, Pamela
Hirvenkari, Lotta
Jousmaki, Veikko
Makela, Jyrki P.
Mandel, Anne
Meronen, Lassi
Hari, Riitta
Parkkonen, Lauri
Source :
Zhdanov , A , Nurminen , J , Baess , P , Hirvenkari , L , Jousmaki , V , Makela , J P , Mandel , A , Meronen , L , Hari , R & Parkkonen , L 2015 , ' An Internet-Based Real-Time Audiovisual Link for Dual MEG Recordings ' PLoS One , vol 10 , no. 6 , 0128485 . DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0128485
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Hyperscanning Most neuroimaging studies of human social cognition have focused on brain activity of single subjects. More recently, "two-person neuroimaging" has been introduced, with simultaneous recordings of brain signals from two subjects involved in social interaction. These simultaneous "hyperscanning" recordings have already been carried out with a spectrum of neuroimaging modalities, such as functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), electroencephalography (EEG), and functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS). Dual MEG Setup We have recently developed a setup for simultaneous magnetoencephalographic (MEG) recordings of two subjects that communicate in real time over an audio link between two geographically separated MEG laboratories. Here we present an extended version of the setup, where we have added a video connection and replaced the telephone-landline-based link with an Internet connection. Our setup enabled transmission of video and audio streams between the sites with a one-way communication latency of about 130 ms. Our software that allows reproducing the setup is publicly available. Validation We demonstrate that the audiovisual Internet-based link can mediate real-time interaction between two subjects who try to mirror each others' hand movements that they can see via the video link. All the nine pairs were able to synchronize their behavior. In addition to the video, we captured the subjects' movements with accelerometers attached to their index fingers; we determined from these signals that the average synchronization accuracy was 215 ms. In one subject pair we demonstrate inter-subject coherence patterns of the MEG signals that peak over the sensorimotor areas contralateral to the hand used in the task.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Zhdanov , A , Nurminen , J , Baess , P , Hirvenkari , L , Jousmaki , V , Makela , J P , Mandel , A , Meronen , L , Hari , R & Parkkonen , L 2015 , ' An Internet-Based Real-Time Audiovisual Link for Dual MEG Recordings ' PLoS One , vol 10 , no. 6 , 0128485 . DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0128485
Notes :
15, Zhdanov , A , Nurminen , J , Baess , P , Hirvenkari , L , Jousmaki , V , Makela , J P , Mandel , A , Meronen , L , Hari , R & Parkkonen , L 2015 , ' An Internet-Based Real-Time Audiovisual Link for Dual MEG Recordings ' PLoS One , vol 10 , no. 6 , 0128485 . DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0128485, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.ocn944275848
Document Type :
Electronic Resource