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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Information decomposition in the frequency domain: a new framework to study cardiovascular and cardiorespiratory oscillations

J. Cernanova KrohovaMichal JavorkaLuca FaesRiccardo PerniceAlberto PortaYuri AntonacciGorana Mijatovic

subject

Multivariate statisticsMultivariate analysisComputer scienceGeneral MathematicsGeneral Physics and AstronomyBlood PressureCardiovascular SystemMatrix decompositionHeart RateDecomposition (computer science)HumansHeart rate variabilityStatistical physicsSeries (mathematics)Stochastic processRespirationautonomic nervous systemGeneral EngineeringMultivariate time series analysisheart rate variabilityredundancy and synergyCardiorespiratory fitnesscoherence function multivariate time-series analysiTerm (time)Autonomic nervous systemInformation dynamicFrequency domainMultivariate AnalysisBiological system

description

While cross-spectral and information-theoretic approaches are widely used for the multivariate analysis of physiological time series, their combined utilization is far less developed in the literature. This study introduces a framework for the spectral decomposition of multivariate information measures, which provides frequency-specific quantifications of the information shared between a target and two source time series and of its expansion into amounts related to how the sources contribute to the target dynamics with unique, redundant and synergistic information. The framework is illustrated in simulations of linearly interacting stochastic processes, showing how it allows us to retrieve amounts of information shared by the processes within specific frequency bands which are otherwise not detectable by time-domain information measures, as well as coupling features which are not detectable by spectral measures. Then, it is applied to the time series of heart period, systolic and diastolic arterial pressure and respiration variability measured in healthy subjects monitored in the resting supine position and during head-up tilt. We show that the spectral measures of unique, redundant and synergistic information shared by these variability series, integrated within specific frequency bands of physiological interest and reflect the mechanisms of short-term regulation of cardiovascular and cardiorespiratory oscillations and their alterations induced by the postural stress. This article is part of the theme issue 'Advanced computation in cardiovascular physiology: new challenges and opportunities'.

10.1098/rsta.2020.0250http://hdl.handle.net/10447/523659