Alpha wave

Alpha waves, or the alpha rhythm, are neural oscillations in the frequency range of 8–12 Hz[1] likely originating from the synchronous and coherent (in phase or constructive) electrical activity of thalamic pacemaker cells in humans. Historically, they are also called "Berger's waves" after Hans Berger, who first described them when he invented the EEG in 1924.[2]

Alpha waves

Alpha waves are one type of brain waves detected by electrophysiological and closely related methods, such as by electroencephalography (EEG) or magnetoencephalography (MEG), and can be quantified using quantitative electroencephalography (qEEG). They can be predominantly recorded from the occipital lobes during wakeful relaxation with closed eyes and were the earliest brain rhythm recorded in humans.[3] Alpha waves are reduced with open eyes and sleep, while they are enhanced during drowsiness. Historically, they were thought to represent the activity of the visual cortex in an idle state. More recent papers have argued that they inhibit areas of the cortex not in use, or alternatively that they play an active role in network coordination and communication.[4] Occipital alpha waves during periods of eyes closed are the strongest EEG brain signals.[5]

An alpha-like variant called a mu wave can be found over the primary motor cortex.

Research

Possible types and origins

Some researchers posit that there are at least two forms of alpha waves, which may have different functions in the wake-sleep cycle.

Alpha waves are present at different stages of the wake-sleep cycle.[6] The most widely researched is during the relaxed mental state, where the subject is at rest with eyes closed, but is not tired or asleep. This alpha activity is centered in the occipital lobe,[7][8] although there has been speculation that it has a thalamic origin.[9] This wave begins appearing at around four months, and is initially a frequency of 4 waves per second. The mature alpha wave, at 10 waves per second, is firmly established by age 3.[10]

The second occurrence of alpha wave activity is during REM sleep. As opposed to the awake form of alpha activity, this form is located in a frontal-central location in the brain. The purpose of alpha activity during REM sleep has yet to be fully understood. Currently, there are arguments that alpha patterns are a normal part of REM sleep, and for the notion that it indicates a semi-arousal period. It has been suggested that this alpha activity is inversely related to REM sleep pressure.

It has long been believed that alpha waves indicate a wakeful period during sleep. This has been attributed to studies where subjects report non-refreshing sleep and have EEG records reporting high levels of alpha intrusion into sleep. This occurrence is known as alpha wave intrusion.[11] However, it is possible that these explanations may be misleading, as they only focus on alpha waves being generated from the occipital lobe.

Meditation

Mindfulness meditation has been shown to increase alpha wave power in both healthy subjects and patients.[12] Practitioners of Transcendental Meditation have demonstrated a one Hertz reduction in alpha wave frequency relative to controls.[13]

Alpha wave intrusion

Alpha wave intrusion occurs when the alpha waves appear with non-REM sleep when delta activity is expected. It is hypothesized to be associated with fibromyalgia with increased phasic alpha sleep activity correlated with clinical manifestations of fibromyalgia, such as longer pain duration.[14]

Despite this, alpha wave intrusion has not been significantly linked to any major sleep disorder, including chronic fatigue syndrome, and major depression. However, it is common in chronic fatigued patients, and may amplify the effects of other sleep disorders.[15]

Mistake prediction

Following this lapse-of-attention line of thought, a recent study indicates that alpha waves may be used to predict mistakes. In it, MEGs measured increases of up to 25% in alpha brain wave activity before mistakes occurred. This study used common sense: alpha waves indicate idleness, and mistakes are often made when a person is doing something automatically, or "on auto-pilot", and not paying attention to the task they are performing. After the mistake was noticed by the subject, there was a decrease in alpha waves as the subject began paying more attention. This study hopes to promote the use of wireless EEG technology on employees in high-risk fields, such as air traffic controlling, to monitor alpha wave activity and gauge the attention level of the employee.[16]

Processing of visual information in memory

A study has shown that the appearance of an alpha rhythm with open eyes can be a predictor of visual information processing in working memory.[17] It was shown that the moment of appearance of alpha activity depends on the type of stimulus in memory and the number of visual characteristics (color, shape, etc.) that it needs to keep in memory. The authors suggest that the appearance of the alpha rhythm with open eyes may indicate a temporary shutdown of visual information processing in the primary visual cortex at the moments when the subject analyzes the image in visual memory. At these moments, information is processed in the association areas of the visual cortex (hV4, V3v, VO1, VO2 areas).[18]

Measurement

EEG artefacts

As demonstrated by Dr. Adrian R. M. Upton, it is possible for extraneous sources (ambient fluctuations detected with a mound of Jell-O in Upton's experiments) to cause signals to appear on an EEG readout, causing false signals to be interpreted as healthy alpha waves. This finding suggests that it is possible that a non-flat EEG could lead to the interpretation that a patient is still living when in fact he or she is long dead.[19]

Cecil Adams from The Straight Dope discusses this scenario:

Sometimes it's claimed Jell-O brainwaves are identical to a healthy adult's. That's clearly a stretch, but the Jell-O EEG readings do look pretty similar to a normal human alpha rhythm. Alpha waves are observed when a patient is awake and resting with eyes closed, and in some kinds of sleep and reversible coma. True, the Jell-O waves are a little slower and of much lower amplitude, barely within normal human limits, but that doesn't tell you much by itself. Hypoxia, encephalitis, and other medical conditions can cause reduced frequency and amplitude, as can drug use.[20]

History

The sample of human EEG with prominent alpha-rhythm in occipital sites

Alpha waves were discovered by German neurologist Hans Berger, the inventor of the EEG itself. Alpha waves were among the first waves documented by Berger, along with beta waves, and he displayed an interest in "alpha blockage", the process by which alpha waves decrease and beta waves increase upon a subject opening their eyes. This distinction earned the alpha wave the alternate title of "Berger's Wave".

Berger took a cue from Ukrainian physiologist Vladimir Pravdich-Neminsky, who used a string galvanometer to create a photograph of the electrical activity of a dog's brain. Using similar techniques, Berger confirmed the existence of electrical activity in the human brain. He first did this by presenting a stimulus to hospital patients with skull damage and measuring the electrical activity in their brains. Later he ceased the stimulus method and began measuring the natural rhythmic electrical cycles in the brain. The first natural rhythm he documented was what would become known as the alpha wave. Berger was very thorough and meticulous in his data-gathering, but despite his brilliance, he did not feel confident enough to publish his discoveries until at least five years after he had made them. In 1929, he published his first findings on alpha waves in the journal Archiv für Psychiatrie. He was originally met with derision for his EEG technique and his subsequent alpha and beta wave discoveries. His technique and findings did not gain widespread acceptance in the psychological community until 1937, when he gained the approval of the famous physiologist Lord Adrian, who took a particular interest in alpha waves.[21]

Alpha waves again gained recognition in the early 1960s and 1970s with the creation of a biofeedback theory relating to brain waves (see below). Such biofeedback, referred to as a kind of neurofeedback, relating to alpha waves is the conscious elicitation of alpha brainwaves by a subject. Two researchers in the United States explored this concept through unrelated experiments. Joe Kamiya, of the University of Chicago, discovered that some individuals had the conscious ability to recognize when they were creating alpha waves, and could increase their alpha activity. These individuals were motivated through a reward system from Kamiya. The second progenitor of biofeedback is Barry Sterman, from the University of California, Los Angeles. He was working with monitoring brain waves in cats and found that, when the cats were trained to withhold motor movement, they released SMR, or mu, waves, a wave similar to alpha waves. Using a reward system, he further trained these cats to enter this state more easily. Later, he was approached by the United States Air Force to test the effects of a jet fuel that was known to cause seizures in humans. Sterman tested the effects of this fuel on the previously-trained cats, and discovered that they had a higher resistance to seizures than non-trained cats.

Alpha wave biofeedback has gained interest for having some successes in humans for seizure suppression and for treatment of depression.[22]

Alpha waves again gained interest in regards to an engineering approach to the science fiction challenge of psychokinesis, i.e. control of movement of a physical object using energy emanating from a human brain. In 1988, EEG alpha rhythm was used in a brain–computer interface experiment of control of a movement of a physical object, a robot.[23][24] It was the first experiment to demonstrate control of a physical object, a robot, using EEG.[25][26]

See also

Brain waves

References

  1. Foster, JJ; Sutterer, DW; Serences, JT; Vogel, EK; Awh, E (July 2017). "Alpha-Band Oscillations Enable Spatially and Temporally Resolved Tracking of Covert Spatial Attention". Psychological Science. 28 (7): 929–941. doi:10.1177/0956797617699167. PMC 5675530. PMID 28537480.
  2. İnce, Rümeysa; Adanır, Saliha Seda; Sevmez, Fatma (2020-03-05). "The inventor of electroencephalography (EEG): Hans Berger (1873–1941)". Child's Nervous System. 37 (9): 2723–2724. doi:10.1007/s00381-020-04564-z. ISSN 1433-0350. PMID 32140776.
  3. Berger, Hans (1929-12-01). "Über das Elektrenkephalogramm des Menschen". Archiv für Psychiatrie und Nervenkrankheiten (in German). 87 (1): 527–570. doi:10.1007/BF01797193. ISSN 1433-8491. S2CID 10835361.
  4. Palva S.; Palva J.M. (2007). "New vistas for a-frequency band oscillations". Trends Neurosci. 30 (4): 150–158. doi:10.1016/j.tins.2007.02.001. PMID 17307258. S2CID 9156592.
  5. Mazaheri A.; Jensen O. (2010). "Shaping functional architecture by oscillatory alpha activity: gating by inhibition". Front Hum Neurosci. 4 (186): 1–8. doi:10.3389/fnhum.2010.00186. ISSN 1662-5161. PMC 2990626. PMID 21119777.
  6. Brancaccio, Arianna; Tabarelli, Davide; Bigica, Marco; Baldauf, Daniel (2020-04-24). "Cortical source localization of sleep-stage specific oscillatory activity". Scientific Reports. 10 (1): 6976. Bibcode:2020NatSR..10.6976B. doi:10.1038/s41598-020-63933-5. ISSN 2045-2322. PMC 7181624. PMID 32332806.
  7. Bagherzadeh, Yasaman; Baldauf, Daniel; Pantazis, Dimitrios; Desimone, Robert (February 2020). "Alpha Synchrony and the Neurofeedback Control of Spatial Attention". Neuron. 105 (3): 577–587.e5. doi:10.1016/j.neuron.2019.11.001. ISSN 0896-6273. PMID 31812515. S2CID 208614924.
  8. Vries, Ingmar E. J. de; Marinato, Giorgio; Baldauf, Daniel (2021-08-24). "Decoding object-based auditory attention from source-reconstructed MEG alpha oscillations". Journal of Neuroscience. 41 (41): 8603–8617. doi:10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0583-21.2021. ISSN 0270-6474. PMC 8513695. PMID 34429378.
  9. Domino E. F.; Ni L. S.; et al. (2009). "Tobacco smoking produces widespread dominant brainwave alpha frequency increases". International Journal of Psychophysiology. 74 (3): 192–198. doi:10.1016/j.ijpsycho.2009.08.011. PMC 2788071. PMID 19765621.
  10. Niedermeyer E (1997). "Alpha rhythms as physiological and abnormal phenomena". International Journal of Psychophysiology. 26 (1–3): 31–49. doi:10.1016/s0167-8760(97)00754-x. PMID 9202993.
  11. Task Force Allas (1992). "ASDA report on EEG arousals: scoring rules and examples". Sleep. 15 (2): 173–184. doi:10.1093/sleep/15.2.173.
  12. Lomas T, Ivtzan I, Fu CH (2015). "A systematic review of the neurophysiology of mindfulness on EEG oscillations" (PDF). Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews. 57: 401–410. doi:10.1016/j.neubiorev.2015.09.018. PMID 26441373. S2CID 7276590.
  13. Cahn BR, Polich J (2006). "Meditation states and traits: EEG, ERP, and neuroimaging studies". Psychological Bulletin. 132 (2): 180–211. doi:10.1037/0033-2909.132.2.180. PMID 16536641.
  14. Roizenblatt, S.; Moldofsky, H.; Benedito-Silva, A. A.; Tufik, S. (January 2001). "Alpha sleep characteristics in fibromyalgia". Arthritis and Rheumatism. 44 (1): 222–230. doi:10.1002/1529-0131(200101)44:1<222::AID-ANR29>3.0.CO;2-K. ISSN 0004-3591. PMID 11212164.
  15. Manu, Peter; Lane, Thomas J.; Matthews, Dale A.; Castriotta, Richard J.; Watson, Robert K.; Abeles, Micha (1994). "Alpha-delta sleep in patients with a chief complaint of chronic fatigue". Southern Medical Journal. 87 (4): 465–470. doi:10.1097/00007611-199404000-00008. PMID 8153772. S2CID 21961157.
  16. "Brain Wave Patterns Can Predict Blunders, New Study Finds". UC Davis News and Information. University of California, Davis campus. 23 March 2009.
  17. Kozlovskiy, S.A.; Rogachev, A.O. (2021). "Appearance of alpha rhythm as a predictor of visual information processing in working memory". Perception. Sage. 50 (1): 206. doi:10.1177/03010066211059887. ISSN 0301-0066. PMID 34989647. S2CID 245771701.
  18. Kozlovskiy, Stanislav; Rogachev, Anton (2021). "How Areas of Ventral Visual Stream Interact When We Memorize Color and Shape Information". Advances in Intelligent Systems and Computing. Springer. 1358: 95–100. doi:10.1007/978-3-030-71637-0_10. ISBN 978-3-030-71636-3. ISSN 2194-5357. S2CID 234902744.
  19. JELL‐0 TEST FINDS LIFELIKE SIGNAL, By BOYCE RENSBERGER, New York Times, MARCH 6, 1976
  20. "Can brainwaves be detected in lime Jell-O?". straightdope.com. 11 June 2010. Retrieved 7 April 2018.
  21. Karbowski K (2002). "Hans Berger (1873-194)". Journal of Neurology. 249 (8): 1130–1131. doi:10.1007/s00415-002-0872-4. PMID 12420722. S2CID 32730261.
  22. Ulrich Kraft. Train Your Brain-Mental exercises with neurofeedback may ease symptoms of attention-deficit disorder, epilepsy and depression--and even boost cognition in healthy brains. Scientific American. 2006
  23. S. Bozinovski, M. Sestakov, L. Bozinovska: Using EEG alpha rhythm to control a mobile robot, In G. Harris, C. Walker (eds.) Proc. IEEE Annual Conference of Medical and Biological Society, p. 1515-1516, New Orleans, 1988
  24. S. Bozinovski: Mobile robot trajectory control: From fixed rails to direct bioelectric control, In O. Kaynak (ed.) Proc. IEEE Workshop on Intelligent Motion Control, p. 63-67, Istanbul, 1990
  25. M. Lebedev: Augmentation of sensorimotor functions with neural prostheses. Opera Medica and Physiologica. Vol. 2 (3): 211-227, 2016
  26. M. Lebedev, M. Nicolelis: Brain-machine interfaces: from basic science to neuroprostheses and neurorehabilitation, Physiological Review 97:737-867, 2017

Further reading

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.