Alpha and SSVEP power outperform gamma power in capturing attentional modulation in human EEG

Author:

Das Aritra1ORCID,Nandi Nilanjana1ORCID,Ray Supratim1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Neuroscience, Indian Institute of Science , Bangalore, 560012 , India

Abstract

Abstract Attention typically reduces power in the alpha (8–12 Hz) band and increases power in gamma (>30 Hz) band in brain signals, as reported in macaque local field potential (LFP) and human electro/magneto-encephalogram (EEG/MEG) studies. In addition, EEG studies often use flickering stimuli that produce a specific measure called steady-state-visually-evoked-potential (SSVEP), whose power also increases with attention. However, effectiveness of these neural measures in capturing attentional modulation is unknown since stimuli and task paradigms vary widely across studies. In a recent macaque study, attentional modulation was more salient in the gamma band of the LFP, compared to alpha or SSVEP. To compare this with human EEG, we designed an orientation change detection task where we presented both static and counterphasing stimuli of matched difficulty levels to 26 subjects and compared attentional modulation of various measures under similar conditions. We report two main results. First, attentional modulation was comparable for SSVEP and alpha. Second, non-foveal stimuli produced weak gamma despite various stimulus optimizations and showed negligible attentional modulation although full-screen gratings showed robust gamma activity. Our results are useful for brain-machine-interfacing studies where suitable features are used for decoding attention, and also provide clues about spatial scales of neural mechanisms underlying attention.

Funder

Ministry of Education, Government of India

Wellcome Trust/DBT India Alliance

Tata Trusts

Department of Biotechnology-Indian Institute of Science

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience

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