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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2019 Feb 1.
Published in final edited form as: Anesthesiology. 2018 Feb;128(2):305–316. doi: 10.1097/ALN.0000000000001940

Figure 5.

Figure 5

Suppression of cortical sensorimotor α-β functional connectivity with propofol anesthesia. (A-B) contrasting sensorimotor coherence between PreAnes (black) and Anes (red) conditions, for Parkinson disease and essential tremor groups respectively. Dashed lines indicate 95% confidence level for coherence driven by Jackknife method, indicating that coherence values at PreAnes and Anes conditions are statistically significant. Shades around each average coherence curve show 95% confidence intervals of the mean. Significant differences at P =0.05 level highlighted in blue and corrected for multiple comparisons. (C-D) Imaginary coherence between sensorimotor cortices for PreAnes (black) and Anes (red) for Parkinson disease and essential tremor groups respectively. Dashed lines indicate 95% confidence level for coherence driven by Jackknife method, indicating that coherence values at PreAnes and Anes conditions are statistically significant. Shades around each average coherence curve show 95% confidence intervals of the mean Significant differences at P =0.05 are highlighted with blue and corrected for multiple comparisons.