Task-Specific Dynamical Entropy Variations in EEG as a Biomarker for Parkinson's Disease Progression

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Date

2025

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Springer

Abstract

Uncovering the neuronal mechanisms un-derlying optimal behavioral performance is essential to understand how the brain dynamically adapts to changing conditions. In Parkinson's disease (PD), these neuronal mechanisms are disrupted and lead to impairments in motor coordination and higher-order cognitive functions. This study investigates neuronal dynamics during a lower-limb pedaling task by analyzing the dynamical entropy of EEG signals in healthy controls (HC), PD patients, and PD patients with freezing of gait (PDFOG). We examined both average entropy changes and entropy variability across trials to characterize task-specific neural adaptations across disease progression. Results showed that PD and PDFOG patients exhibited decreased levels of permutation entropy in frontal and parietal regions, which may be associated with loss of cognitive adapta-tion due to altered information processing. Additionally, Vasicek's entropy variability in both PD groups was significantly diminished in occipital and left frontal regions, suggesting reduced cognitive capacity to dy-namically allocate neuronal resources during task engagement. We extended this analysis to the classification of groups using LDA and SVM classifiers, where entropy-derived features achieved a classification accuracy of up to 96.15% when distinguishing HC from PDFOG patients. This dynamical entropic framework provides a novel approach for capturing neural complexity changes during task performance, revealing subtle cognitive-motor impairments in PD. Understanding the maintenance of cognitive information processing and flexibility in response to motor and cognitive task demands could be a useful tool to track PD diagnosis and progression in addition to resting-state analyses.

Description

Onay, Fatih/0000-0003-1396-2885

Keywords

Entropy, Complexity, Parkinson's Disease, EEG, Pedaling, Task Engagement

Turkish CoHE Thesis Center URL

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WoS Q

Q2

Scopus Q

Q1

Source

Geroscience

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