Many neuroscientists mislead with colors, and some other neuroscientists mislead us with lines. I give a detailed explanation of how neuroscientists so often mislead us with colors in my post here. I can summarize that post in a single paragraph. What goes on is that neuroscientists do brain imaging studies attempting to show what are called neural correlates of particular mental activities. The neuroscientists are hoping to find evidence that some particular part of the brain will become much more active during some mental activity. With the exception of activity in the occipital part of the brain (which is more active when people are seeing things), no such evidence of much greater activity is found. Typically the brain imaging will only show some brain region being only about 1 part in 200 more active, a half of one percent more active, no more than we would expect to see by chance fluctuations. But what goes on is that such very tiny "half of one percent" variations will be depicted with brain imaging visuals showing the tiny fluctuations appearing in bright red against a black-and-white background. Such visuals deceive us by giving the idea that a large variation has occurred. If the visuals were to be honestly done, they would show variations in color so small you never would be able to notice them. Human brains don't look or act significantly different when you think or imagine or remember, contrary to claims that such things are neural activities.
Now let me explain how so many neuroscientists mislead us with lines and mislead us about lines. This goes on when neuroscientists give us misleading visuals regarding brain waves, and make misleading statements about brain waves. Below is a type of chart that we see very often in the literature of neuroscience, mostly in popular accounts. As I note at the bottom, this type of diagram is misleading, because all five of these types of brains waves show up in all of the different states listed.
Below are some reports from the neuroscience literature, reports that conflict with diagrams like the one above, and conflict with the paper cited above, by showing that all the main types of brain waves occur during the main types of neural activity:
Delta Waves (1-4 Hz)
- "This wave is recorded during very low activities of the brain and deep sleep (link)."
- "Delta waves (DW) are present both during sleep and in wakefulness (link)."
- "Our recordings reveal rhythmic delta during wakefulness at 10% of all recording sites" in 18 humans (link).
- "Recently, however, many studies have reported the presence of prominent delta activity during conscious states, which casts doubt on the hypothesis that high amplitude delta oscillations are an indicator of unconsciousness (link)."
- The diagram here shows many delta waves (1-4 Hz) occurring abundantly in animal brains while animals "waited to see a new image."
- The paper here has a graph showing delta waves (1-4 Hz) occurring abundantly while humans meditated.
- A paper on epileptic seizures says, "Slow waves (≤4 Hz) can be found in seizures with impairment of consciousness and also occur in focal seizures without impairment of consciousness but with inhibited access to memory functions."
- The paper "Brain Activation and Cognitive Load during EEG Measured Creativity Tasks Accompanied by Relaxation Music" has circular "power spectral analysis" charts for six subjects, showing mostly delta and theta waves (about 5 Hz) for subjects while they were doing three things: resting, doing creative work, and speaking.
- The paper "IDENTIFICATION OF DOMINANT WAVE DURING THE RECITATION OF AL-MULK VERSE WITH (WITHOUT) UNDERSTANDING USING EEG SIGNAL" reports "During Al-Quran recitation (without understanding), the highest amplitude of the power spectrum distribution was observed in Delta at the Frontal area (F1, F2, F4, F7 and F8), and Beta2 and Gamma on EEG, predominantly in the T3, T4 and T5 area." This is an example of what occurs very frequently: which brain wave is dominant will vary depending on which brain region is read from.
Theta Waves (4-8 Hz)
- "In anxious individuals for example, research suggests that there is a significantly higher degree of frontal-midline theta activity compared to non-anxious individuals, and that could be associated with more reactive control modes of behavior in the moment rather than proactive behaviors such as planning and preparation (link)."
- "This rhythm is recorded during low brain activities, sleep, or drowsiness (link)."
- "Theta waves generate the theta rhythm, a neural oscillation in the brain that underlies various aspects of cognition and behavior, including learning, memory, and spatial navigation in many animals (link)."
- The diagram here shows many theta waves (4-8 Hz) occurring in animal brains while animals "waited to see a new image."
- The paper here has a graph showing theta waves (4-8 Hz) occurring abundantly while humans meditated.
- A scientific paper states that "REM sleep is characterized by frequencies in the theta (4–8 Hz), beta (16–32 Hz), and gamma (>32 Hz) ranges."
- The paper here has a graph (Figure 8) showing theta waves (4-8 Hz) occurring abundantly in people playing a throwing game.
- The paper "Brain Activation and Cognitive Load during EEG Measured Creativity Tasks Accompanied by Relaxation Music" has circular "power spectral analysis" charts for six subjects, showing mostly delta and theta waves (about 5 Hz) for subjects while they were doing three things: resting, doing creative work, and speaking.
- The paper here found quite a bit of alpha, theta and gamma waves during a memorization test.
Alpha Waves (8-13 Hz)
- The paper here has a graph showing alpha waves occurring abundantly while humans meditated.
- The diagram here shows many alpha waves (8-13 Hz) occurring abundantly in animal brains while animals "waited to see a new image."
- The paper here has a graph (Figure 8) showing alpha waves (8-13 Hz) occurring abundantly in people playing a throwing game.
- In Figure 1 of the paper here, we are shown multitaper EEG spectrograms that are called representative of sleep, and those diagrams seem to depict theta, alpha and beta waves occurring almost as frequently as delta waves.
- The paper here refers to alpha waves occurring during anesthesia, when a patient is in deep unconsciousness. We read, "All four spectrograms for these data show the well-known alpha-beta oscillations (8–17 Hz) and slow-delta oscillations (0.1–4 Hz) that are characteristic of general anesthesia maintained by sevoflurane."
- The paper here found quite a bit of alpha, theta and gamma waves during a memorization test.
- While the page here claims that alpha waves "disappear during sleep," the page here states that "stage 1 sleep is associated with both alpha and theta waves," and shows an EEG of alpha waves recorded during sleep. The page here states that alpha waves of between 8 to 14 Hz occur in "bursts of activity" in stage 2 sleep (light sleep).
- A paper studying brain waves during hypnosis in 8 subjects found little change in brain waves, with alpha waves being the main type of wave before, during and after hypnosis. Conversely, another paper tells us "a number of studies have not found an increase in alpha activity with hypnosis (Kihlstrom, 2013; Ray, 1997; Sabourin, Cutcomb, Crawford, & Pribram, 1990)," and it also tells us "findings linking hypnosis to theta oscillations, however, are more common."
Beta Waves (13-30 Hz)
- The first graph below show gamma waves while animals "waited to see a new image."
- The paper here has a graph showing beta waves occurring abundantly while humans meditated.
- An article in an encyclopedia of neuroscience states, "Beta and gamma waves (20–80 Hz) occur spontaneously during REM sleep and waking and are evoked by intense attention, conditioned responses, tasks requiring fine movements, or sensory stimuli."
- In Figure 1 of the paper here, we are shown multitaper EEG spectrograms that are called representative of sleep, and those diagrams seem to depict theta, alpha and beta waves occurring almost as frequently as delta waves.
- The paper here has a graph showing beta waves occurring in significant amounts during anesthesia.
- The paper here has a graph (Figure 8) showing beta waves (13-30 Hz) occurring abundantly in people playing a throwing game.
Gamma Waves (30-100 Hz)
- The first graph below show gamma waves while animals "waited to see a new image."
- The paper here has a graph showing gamma waves occurring abundantly while humans meditated. Despite some claims of gamma wave activity being associated with concentration, a study of brain-injured veterans found they have much higher levels of gamma waves in a certain brain region.
- A paper found that "gamma oscillations in low (30–50 Hz) and high (60–120 Hz) frequency bands recurrently emerged in all investigated regions" in the brains of 20 humans during "slow wave sleep."
- A paper on sleeping monkeys says, "Gamma oscillations around 50 Hz or higher were most prominently observed during REM sleep."
- An article in an encyclopedia of neuroscience states, "Beta and gamma waves (20–80 Hz) occur spontaneously during REM sleep and waking and are evoked by intense attention, conditioned responses, tasks requiring fine movements, or sensory stimuli."
- A scientific paper states that "REM sleep is characterized by frequencies in the theta (4–8 Hz), beta (16–32 Hz), and gamma (>32 Hz) ranges. "
- Another paper found gamma wave activity (in the range of 30-40 Hz) in hypnotized subjects.
- A paper states that "gamma oscillations (30-50 Hz) recorded in the local field potentials (LFP) of the hippocampus are a marker of temporal lobe seizure propagation," and that "78.2% of seizures involving both the hippocampus and amygdala showed hippocampal gamma oscillations," conflicting with claims that such gamma waves (gamma oscillations) are characteristic of problem solving or concentration.
- The paper here found quite a bit of alpha, theta and gamma waves during a memorization test.
- The source here states that "some researchers contest the validity or meaningfulness of gamma wave activity detected by scalp EEG, because the frequency band of gamma waves overlaps with the electromyographic frequency band," so "gamma signal recordings could be contaminated by muscle activity."
The graph shows brain waves from three different parts of the brain. The graph shows plenty of all five of the main types of brain waves: delta waves, theta waves, alpha waves, beta waves and gamma waves. The graph does not match the depiction in the typical brain wave chart, suggesting delta waves only occur during sleep.
Hi mark, great article on brain waves. I agree interpretation of brain waves can become murky real quick.
ReplyDeleteI remember reading an article a while back which mentioned that each individuals brain waves are different, even when they are performing the same task.
I recently read a study, here https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/lucid-dying-patients-recall-death-experiences-during-cpr-301669519.html
which has the title
“Detection of rhythmic brain waves suggestive of near-death experiences”
I’m curious how well these “rhythmic spikes” correlate then with near-death experiences.
The article in question has no link to a scientific paper, and doesn't contain any specific information about brain waves recorded during cardiac arrest or near-death experiences. I hope to see the scientific paper underlying this press report. I normally would try to do that by using Google Scholar, and searching for the author, Sam Parnia. Doing that currently produces no scientific paper corresponding to this report. But I hope to read such a paper, if it is ever published.
DeleteMy apologies, in my haste I referred to the link as a study when i should have said article. I myself came across the article from evolutionnews.org which had in the title “study”.
ReplyDelete