The role of alpha oscillations in free‐ and goal‐directed semantic associations

Author:

Zioga Ioanna1ORCID,Kenett Yoed N.2ORCID,Giannopoulos Anastasios3ORCID,Luft Caroline Di Bernardi4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour Radboud University Nijmegen The Netherlands

2. Faculty of Data and Decision Sciences, Technion—Israel Institute of Technology Haifa Israel

3. School of Electrical and Computer Engineering National Technical University of Athens (NTUA) Athens Athens Greece

4. Division of Psychology, CHMLS—Life Sciences Brunel University London London UK

Abstract

AbstractAlpha oscillations are known to play a central role in several higher‐order cognitive functions, especially selective attention, working memory, semantic memory, and creative thinking. Nonetheless, we still know very little about the role of alpha in the generation of more remote semantic associations, which is key to creative and semantic cognition. Furthermore, it remains unclear how these oscillations are shaped by the intention to “be creative,” which is the case in most creativity tasks. We aimed to address these gaps in two experiments. In Experiment 1, we compared alpha oscillatory activity (using a method which distinguishes genuine oscillatory activity from transient events) during the generation of free associations which were more vs. less distant from a given concept. In Experiment 2, we replicated these findings and also compared alpha oscillatory activity when people were generating free associations versus associations with the instruction to be creative (i.e. goal‐directed). We found that alpha was consistently higher during the generation of more distant semantic associations, in both experiments. This effect was widespread, involving areas in both left and right hemispheres. Importantly, the instruction to be creative seems to increase alpha phase synchronisation from left to right temporal brain areas, suggesting that intention to be creative changed the flux of information in the brain, likely reflecting an increase in top‐down control of semantic search processes. We conclude that goal‐directed generation of remote associations relies on top‐down mechanisms compared to when associations are freely generated.

Funder

Fundação Bial

Publisher

Wiley

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