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Adriana Böttcher

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YNIMG Journal 2026 Journal Article

Standardizing EEG preprocessing for cross-site integration - the CLEAN pipeline

  • Adriana Böttcher
  • Paul Wendiggensen
  • Moritz Mückschel
  • Sven Hoffmann
  • Claudia Buss
  • Michael Kölch
  • Inga Körte
  • Shu-Chen Li

Electroencephalography (EEG) is a powerful tool for investigating neural processes underlying cognition and neuropsychiatric disorders. Yet, variability in EEG preprocessing strategies restricts reproducibility and data integration across study sites and laboratories, particularly in larger research consortia. This paper introduces the CLEAN-EEG preprocessing pipeline, designed to standardize data processing and documentation across multiple sites. The CLEAN pipeline is implemented in MATLAB using EEGLAB. It comprises three modular, script-based stages: main preprocessing (including down-sampling, filtering, line noise removal, and channel interpolation), independent component analysis preparation and decomposition with flexible options for artifact rejection or neural component extraction, and component exclusion with support for automated classification and dipole fitting. Emphasis is placed on transparency through comprehensive logging and quality-control plotting, as well as on minimizing rank reduction to preserve data suitability for advanced analyses such as source localization and connectivity modeling. By providing clear, adaptable recommendations while ensuring detailed documentation of every step, the CLEAN pipeline aims to harmonize EEG preprocessing in large-scale, multi-center studies. This open and reproducible approach facilitates high throughput analyses, supports the training of researchers, and enables the rigorous integration of neurophysiological data across study sites, study designs, and populations.

YNICL Journal 2026 Journal Article

Theta–Alpha Dysregulation reveals impaired endogenous cognitive control in adolescent Obsessive–Compulsive disorder

  • Sarah Rempel
  • Adriana Böttcher
  • Nicole Beyer
  • Veit Roessner
  • Christian Beste

Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) is characterized by rigid thoughts and behaviors that may compromise cognitive flexibility, yet, especially in adolescence results are inconclusive. This is all the more the case concerning the question whether flexibility deficits emerge specifically when endogenous control, internal monitoring, and working-memory-dependent task-set management are required. In an EEG-beamforming study, we examined adolescents with OCD (N = 68) and healthy controls (HC) (N = 73) in a task-switching paradigm with cue-based (exogenous, externally guided) and memory-based (endogenous, internally guided). Behaviorally, both groups showed typical switch-cost patterns, with greater demands in the memory-based block, and no group differences in switch costs. Oscillatory EEG data revealed marked group differences. During cue-based switching, both groups showed preserved pre-target TBA and ABA modulations in frontal-parietal networks, indicating intact externally preparatory control. In contrast, only HC adolescents showed pre-target TBA increases during memory-based switching, suggesting impaired endogenous task-set updating in OCD. Reactive processes further distinguished groups. In the cue-based block, adolescents with OCD showed switch-related ABA reductions in centro-parietal regions, possibly reflecting inefficient task-set stabilization despite intact behavior. In the memory-based block, HCs displayed coordinated TBA-ABA differentiation supporting internally generated updating, whereas the OCD group showed isolated TBA modulation without accompanying ABA effects, indicating disrupted integration of updating and gating mechanisms. Together, these findings show a dissociation between externally and internally guided flexibility in adolescent OCD.