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Cognitive brain lateralization through neurovascular coupling in healthy subjects: A statistical complexity analysis

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posted on 2025-09-08, 11:18 authored by Héctor Rojas‐Pescio, Lucy BeishonLucy Beishon, Ronney PaneraiRonney Panerai, Max Chacón
<p dir="ltr">Human sensory, cognitive, and motor processes often result in asymmetric cerebral hemisphere activation, observable through neurovascular coupling (NVC). Brain lateralization enables simultaneous performance of distinct functions, enhancing cognitive capacity. This study examined cognitive lateralization through NVC responses to the Addenbrooke's Cognitive Examination‐III (ACE‐III) assessment, using entropy‐based methods and statistical complexity measures (SCM). We tested whether applying dispersion entropy (DE) to cerebral blood velocity (CBv), critical closing pressure (CrCP), and resistance area‐product (RAP) signals could identify significant hemispheric differences during cognitive tasks. Statistical analysis revealed SCM effectively detected lateralization (best p‐value = 0.001), whereas entropy alone did not differentiate hemisphere activity. Furthermore, cognitive stimulation (attention, fluency, language, memory, and visuospatial tasks) generally produced lower SCM values compared to baseline, predominantly in the dominant hemisphere. These findings indicate that NVC exhibits distinct complexity patterns based on hemisphere dominance and cognitive domain stimulated. Additionally, comparison with prior ACE‐III analyses, using population‐normalized mean peak change, reinforces that advanced biomedical‐oriented information theory methods, such as DE and SCM, offer valuable insights into cerebral lateralization mechanisms and NVC responses during cognitive stimulation.</p>

Funding

Rojas National Doctoral Scholarship - Pescio, Hector Gonzalo

Agencia Nacional de Investigación y Desarrollo

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ANID | FondoNacional de Desarrollo Científico yTecnológico (FONDECYT), Grant/Award Number: 1241202

National Institute for Health Research

History

Author affiliation

College of Life Sciences Medical Sciences

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Physiological Reports

Volume

13

Issue

15

Pagination

e70492

Publisher

Wiley

issn

2051-817X

eissn

2051-817X

Copyright date

2025

Available date

2025-09-08

Spatial coverage

United States

Language

en

Deposited by

Professor Ronney Panerai

Deposit date

2025-08-16

Data Access Statement

The data used in this study is not publicly available due to ethical and privacy considerations related to participant confidentiality. Requests for access to anonymized data may be considered by the Cerebral Hemodynamics in Aging and Stroke Medicine (CHiASM) laboratory upon reasonable request and subject to approval by the University of Leicester ethics committee.

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