Frontiers in Human Neuroscience (Mar 2024)

The SESAMEEG package: a probabilistic tool for source localization and uncertainty quantification in M/EEG

  • Gianvittorio Luria,
  • Alessandro Viani,
  • Annalisa Pascarella,
  • Harald Bornfleth,
  • Sara Sommariva,
  • Alberto Sorrentino

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fnhum.2024.1359753
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18

Abstract

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Source localization from M/EEG data is a fundamental step in many analysis pipelines, including those aiming at clinical applications such as the pre-surgical evaluation in epilepsy. Among the many available source localization algorithms, SESAME (SEquential SemiAnalytic Montecarlo Estimator) is a Bayesian method that distinguishes itself for several good reasons: it is highly accurate in localizing focal sources with comparably little sensitivity to input parameters; it allows the quantification of the uncertainty of the reconstructed source(s); it accepts user-defined a priori high- and low-probability search regions in input; it can localize the generators of neural oscillations in the frequency domain. Both a Python and a MATLAB implementation of SESAME are available as open-source packages under the name of SESAMEEG and are well integrated with the main software packages used by the M/EEG community; moreover, the algorithm is part of the commercial software BESA Research (from version 7.0 onwards). While SESAMEEG is arguably simpler to use than other source modeling methods, it has a much richer output that deserves to be described thoroughly. In this article, after a gentle mathematical introduction to the algorithm, we provide a complete description of the available output and show several use cases on experimental M/EEG data.

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