Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Vincent Wens is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Vincent Wens.


Human Brain Mapping | 2015

A geometric correction scheme for spatial leakage effects in MEG/EEG seed-based functional connectivity mapping

Vincent Wens; Brice Marty; Alison Mary; Mathieu Bourguignon; Marc Op De Beeck; Serge Goldman; Patrick Van Bogaert; Philippe Peigneux; Xavier De Tiege

Spatial leakage effects are particularly confounding for seed‐based investigations of brain networks using source‐level electroencephalography (EEG) or magnetoencephalography (MEG). Various methods designed to avoid this issue have been introduced but are limited to particular assumptions about its temporal characteristics. Here, we investigate the usefulness of a model‐based geometric correction scheme (GCS) to suppress spatial leakage emanating from the seed location. We analyze its properties theoretically and then assess potential advantages and limitations with simulated and experimental MEG data (resting state and auditory‐motor task). To do so, we apply Minimum Norm Estimation (MNE) for source reconstruction and use variation of error parameters, statistical gauging of spatial leakage correction and comparison with signal orthogonalization. Results show that the GCS has a local (i.e., near the seed) effect only, in line with the geometry of MNE spatial leakage, and is able to map spatially all types of brain interactions, including linear correlations eliminated after signal orthogonalization. Furthermore, it is robust against the introduction of forward model errors. On the other hand, the GCS can be affected by local overcorrection effects and seed mislocation. These issues arise with signal orthogonalization too, although significantly less extensively, so the two approaches complement each other. The GCS thus appears to be a valuable addition to the spatial leakage correction toolkits for seed‐based FC analyses in source‐projected MEG/EEG data. Hum Brain Mapp 36:4604–4621, 2015.


Clinical Neurophysiology | 2014

About the electrophysiological basis of resting state networks

Vincent Wens; Alison Mary; Mathieu Bourguignon; Serge Goldman; Brice Marty; Marc Op De Beeck; Patrick Van Bogaert; Philippe Peigneux; Xavier De Tiege

Matthew Jon Brookes, Mark Woolrich, Henry Luckhoo, Darren Price, Joanne Hale, Mary Stephenson, Gareth Barnes, Stephen Smith, and Peter Morris Sir Peter Mansfield Magnetic Resonance Centre, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, Nottinghamshire, United Kingdom, Oxford centre for human brain activity, University of Oxford, Oxford, Wellcome trust centre for neuroimaging, University College London, London, Oxford Centre for functional MRI of the brain, University of Oxford, Oxford


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2016

Left Superior Temporal Gyrus Is Coupled to Attended Speech in a Cocktail-Party Auditory Scene.

Marc vander Ghinst; Mathieu Bourguignon; Marc Op De Beeck; Vincent Wens; Brice Marty; Sergio Hassid; Georges Choufani; Veikko Jousmäki; Riitta Hari; Patrick Van Bogaert; Serge Goldman; Xavier De Tiege

Using a continuous listening task, we evaluated the coupling between the listeners cortical activity and the temporal envelopes of different sounds in a multitalker auditory scene using magnetoencephalography and corticovocal coherence analysis. Neuromagnetic signals were recorded from 20 right-handed healthy adult humans who listened to five different recorded stories (attended speech streams), one without any multitalker background (No noise) and four mixed with a “cocktail party” multitalker background noise at four signal-to-noise ratios (5, 0, −5, and −10 dB) to produce speech-in-noise mixtures, here referred to as Global scene. Coherence analysis revealed that the modulations of the attended speech stream, presented without multitalker background, were coupled at ∼0.5 Hz to the activity of both superior temporal gyri, whereas the modulations at 4–8 Hz were coupled to the activity of the right supratemporal auditory cortex. In cocktail party conditions, with the multitalker background noise, the coupling was at both frequencies stronger for the attended speech stream than for the unattended Multitalker background. The coupling strengths decreased as the Multitalker background increased. During the cocktail party conditions, the ∼0.5 Hz coupling became left-hemisphere dominant, compared with bilateral coupling without the multitalker background, whereas the 4–8 Hz coupling remained right-hemisphere lateralized in both conditions. The brain activity was not coupled to the multitalker background or to its individual talkers. The results highlight the key role of listeners left superior temporal gyri in extracting the slow ∼0.5 Hz modulations, likely reflecting the attended speech stream within a multitalker auditory scene. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT When people listen to one person in a “cocktail party,” their auditory cortex mainly follows the attended speech stream rather than the entire auditory scene. However, how the brain extracts the attended speech stream from the whole auditory scene and how increasing background noise corrupts this process is still debated. In this magnetoencephalography study, subjects had to attend a speech stream with or without multitalker background noise. Results argue for frequency-dependent cortical tracking mechanisms for the attended speech stream. The left superior temporal gyrus tracked the ∼0.5 Hz modulations of the attended speech stream only when the speech was embedded in multitalker background, whereas the right supratemporal auditory cortex tracked 4–8 Hz modulations during both noiseless and cocktail-party conditions.


Physical Review E | 2015

Investigating complex networks with inverse models: analytical aspects of spatial leakage and connectivity estimation.

Vincent Wens

Network theory and inverse modeling are two standard tools of applied physics, whose combination is needed when studying the dynamical organization of spatially distributed systems from indirect measurements. However, the associated connectivity estimation may be affected by spatial leakage, an artifact of inverse modeling that limits the interpretability of network analysis. This paper investigates general analytical aspects pertaining to this issue. First, the existence of spatial leakage is derived from the topological structure of inverse operators. Then the geometry of spatial leakage is modeled and used to define a geometric correction scheme, which limits spatial leakage effects in connectivity estimation. Finally, this new approach for network analysis is compared analytically to existing methods based on linear regressions, which are shown to yield biased coupling estimates.


Nuclear Physics | 2008

Consistency conditions in the chiral ring of super-Yang Mills theories

Frank Ferrari; Vincent Wens

Starting from the generalized Konishi anomaly equations at the non-perturbative level, we demonstrate that the algebraic consistency of the quantum chiral ring of the N = 1 super-Yang-Mills theory with gauge group U (N), one adjoint chiral superfield X and Nf ≤ 2 N flavours of quarks implies that the periods of the meromorphic one-form Tr frac(d z, z - X) must be quantized. This shows in particular that identities in the open string description of the theory, that follow from the fact that gauge invariant observables are expressed in terms of gauge variant building blocks, are mapped onto non-trivial dynamical equations in the closed string description.


Epilepsy Research | 2013

Neurophysiological activity underlying altered brain metabolism in epileptic encephalopathies with CSWS

Xavier De Tiege; Nicola Trotta; Marc Op De Beeck; Mathieu Bourguignon; Brice Marty; Vincent Wens; Antoine Nonclercq; Serge Goldman; Patrick Van Bogaert

We investigated the neurophysiological correlate of altered regional cerebral glucose metabolism observed in children with epileptic encephalopathy with continuous spike-waves during sleep (CSWS) by using a multimodal approach combining time-sensitive magnetic source imaging (MSI) and positron emission tomography with [(18)F]-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG-PET). Six patients (4 boys and 2 girls, age range: 4-8 years, 3 patients with Landau-Kleffner syndrome (LKS), 3 patients with atypical rolandic epilepsy (ARE)) were investigated by FDG-PET and MSI at the acute phase of CSWS. In all patients, the onset(s) of spike-waves discharges were associated with significant focal hypermetabolism. The propagation of epileptic discharges to other brain areas was associated with focal hypermetabolism (five patients), hypometabolism (one patient) or the absence of any significant metabolic change (one patient). Interestingly, most of the hypometabolic areas were not involved in the epileptic network per se. This study shows that focal hypermetabolism observed at the acute phase of CSWS are related to the onset or propagation sites of spike-wave discharges. Spike-wave discharges propagation can be associated to other types of metabolic changes, suggesting the occurrence of various neurophysiological mechanisms at the cellular level. Most of the hypometabolic areas are not involved in the epileptic network as such and are probably related to a mechanism of remote inhibition. These findings highlight the critical value of combining FDG-PET with time-sensitive functional neuroimaging approaches such as MSI to assess CSWS epileptic network when surgery is considered as a therapeutic approach.


Human Brain Mapping | 2017

Age‐related differences in practice‐dependent resting‐state functional connectivity related to motor sequence learning

Alison Mary; Vincent Wens; Marc Op De Beeck; Rachel Leproult; Xavier De Tiege; Philippe Peigneux

Decreased neural plasticity is observed with healthy ageing in the primary sensorimotor (SM1) cortex thought to participate in motor learning and memory consolidation processes. In the present magnetoencephalography study, the post‐training reorganization of resting‐state functional connectivity (rsFC) and its relation with motor learning and early consolidation in 14 young (19–30 years) and 14 old (66–70 years) healthy participants were investigated. At the behavioral level, participants were trained on a motor sequence learning task then retested 20–30 min later for transient offline gains in performance. Using a sensorimotor seed‐based approach, rsFC relying on beta band power envelope correlation was estimated immediately before and 10 min after the learning episode. Post‐training changes in rsFC (from before to after learning) were correlated with motor learning performance and with the offline improvement in performance within the hour after learning. Young and old participants exhibited differential patterns of sensorimotor‐related rsFC, bearing specific relationships with motor learning and consolidation. Our findings suggest that rsFC changes following learning reflect the offline processing of the new motor skill and contribute to the early memory consolidation within the hour after learning. Furthermore, differences in post‐training changes in rsFC between young and old participants support the hypothesis that ageing modulates the neural circuits underlying the learning of a new motor skill and the early subsequent consolidation stages. Hum Brain Mapp 38:923–937, 2017.


NeuroImage | 2016

Sleep in children triggers rapid reorganization of memory-related brain processes

Charline Urbain; Xavier De Tiege; Marc Op De Beeck; Mathieu Bourguignon; Vincent Wens; Denis Verheulpen; Patrick Van Bogaert; Philippe Peigneux

Behavioral evidence shows that sleep is crucial for the consolidation of declarative memories in children as in adults. However, the underlying cerebral mechanisms remain virtually unexplored. Using magnetoencephalography, we investigated in children (8.0-12.5years) the impact of sleep (90-minute nap) on the neurophysiological processes underlying the creation and consolidation of novel associations between unknown objects and their functions. Learning-dependent changes in brain activity were observed within hippocampal and parahippocampal regions, followed by sleep-dependent changes in the prefrontal cortex, whereas no equivalent change was observed after a similar period of wakeful rest. Hence, our results show that in school-age children a 90-minute daytime nap after learning is sufficient to trigger the reorganization of memory-related brain activity toward prefrontal areas, where it incorporates into pre-existing semantic knowledge. This functional reorganization process in children is similar to that observed in adults but occurs at a much faster rate, which may contribute to the development of the impressive learning skills that characterize childhood.


Frontiers in Human Neuroscience | 2016

Multilevel Cortical Processing of Somatosensory Novelty: A Magnetoencephalography Study.

Gilles Naeije; Thibaut Vaulet; Vincent Wens; Brice Marty; Serge Goldman; Xavier De Tiege

Using magnetoencephalography (MEG), this study investigates the spatio-temporal dynamics of the multilevel cortical processing of somatosensory change detection. Neuromagnetic signals of 16 healthy adult subjects (7 females and 9 males, mean age 29 ± 3 years) were recorded using whole-scalp-covering MEG while they underwent an oddball paradigm based on simple standard (right index fingertip tactile stimulation) and deviant (simultaneous right index fingertip and middle phalanx tactile stimulation) stimuli gathered into sequences to create and then deviate from stimulus patterns at multiple (local vs. global) levels of complexity. Five healthy adult subjects (3 females and 2 males, mean age 31, 6 ± 2 years) also underwent a similar oddball paradigm in which standard and deviant stimuli were flipped. Local deviations led to a somatosensory mismatch response peaking at 55–130 ms post-stimulus onset with a cortical generator located at the contralateral secondary somatosensory (cSII) cortex. The mismatch response was independent of the deviant stimuli physical characteristics. Global deviants led to a P300 response with cortical sources located bilaterally at temporo-parietal junction (TPJ) and supplementary motor area (SMA). The posterior parietal cortex (PPC) and the SMA were found to generate a contingent magnetic variation (CMV) attributed to top-down expectations. Amplitude of mismatch responses were modulated by top-down expectations and correlated with both the magnitude of the CMV and the P300 amplitude at the right TPJ. These results provide novel empirical evidence for a unified sensory novelty detection system in the human brain by linking detection of salient sensory stimuli in personal and extra-personal spaces to a common framework of multilevel cortical processing.


PLOS ONE | 2013

MEG Correlates of Learning Novel Objects Properties in Children

Charline Urbain; Mathieu Bourguignon; Marc Op De Beeck; Rémy Schmitz; Sophie Galer; Vincent Wens; Brice Marty; Xavier De Tiege; Patrick Van Bogaert; Philippe Peigneux

Learning the functional properties of objects is a core mechanism in the development of conceptual, cognitive and linguistic knowledge in children. The cerebral processes underlying these learning mechanisms remain unclear in adults and unexplored in children. Here, we investigated the neurophysiological patterns underpinning the learning of functions for novel objects in 10-year-old healthy children. Event-related fields (ERFs) were recorded using magnetoencephalography (MEG) during a picture-definition task. Two MEG sessions were administered, separated by a behavioral verbal learning session during which children learned short definitions about the “magical” function of 50 unknown non-objects. Additionally, 50 familiar real objects and 50 other unknown non-objects for which no functions were taught were presented at both MEG sessions. Children learned at least 75% of the 50 proposed definitions in less than one hour, illustrating childrens powerful ability to rapidly map new functional meanings to novel objects. Pre- and post-learning ERFs differences were analyzed first in sensor then in source space. Results in sensor space disclosed a learning-dependent modulation of ERFs for newly learned non-objects, developing 500–800 msec after stimulus onset. Analyses in the source space windowed over this late temporal component of interest disclosed underlying activity in right parietal, bilateral orbito-frontal and right temporal regions. Altogether, our results suggest that learning-related evolution in late ERF components over those regions may support the challenging task of rapidly creating new semantic representations supporting the processing of the meaning and functions of novel objects in children.

Collaboration


Dive into the Vincent Wens's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Xavier De Tiege

Université libre de Bruxelles

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Mathieu Bourguignon

Université libre de Bruxelles

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Brice Marty

Université libre de Bruxelles

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Serge Goldman

Université libre de Bruxelles

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Marc Op De Beeck

Université libre de Bruxelles

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Patrick Van Bogaert

Université libre de Bruxelles

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Philippe Peigneux

Université libre de Bruxelles

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Alison Mary

Université libre de Bruxelles

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge