Title
Enhanced EEG alpha time-domain phase synchrony during transcendental meditation: implications for cortical integration theory
Abstract
Information transfer and integration in the brain that leads to high-level cognitive processes requires neuronal coordination. High phase synchronization (zero-lag) in fast frequencies is implicated in integrating sensory events. Alpha EEG activity, long regarded as a passive "idling" frequency, is now being implicated in this integrative function. As an example, in brain pathology decreased alpha phase synchrony is correlated with a decline in cognitive function. Transcendental Meditation (TM) provides an interesting starting point to study neuronal coordination because the "transcending" experience is a baseline state of consciousness, a condition of restful alertness without cognitive activity. Previous work on TM, reported to increase numerous indices of mind-body health, has been shown to increase neural coherence in the alpha band. In this study 15 subjects practicing the TM technique were investigated for changes in alpha phase synchrony. A time-domain method was used to measure millisecond phase shifts in 19 electrodes in long-term practitioners of TM in two conditions: eyes-closed resting and meditation. Significant reductions in millisecond phase lag were found during the meditation condition as compared to the eyes-closed resting condition in 30 of 49 long-range electrode pairings between frontal and occipito-parietal areas. Under the same conditions, twelve control subjects without meditation experience showed no change in alpha phase synchrony over the same time period. It is proposed that enhanced phase synchrony in the alpha frequency during meditation may improve functional integration and may have implications for performance and mind-body health. A short proposal for a phase synchrony model of consciousness is included.
Year
DOI
Venue
2005
10.1016/j.sigpro.2005.07.009
Signal Processing
Keywords
Field
DocType
phase synchrony model,enhanced eeg alpha time-domain,mind-body health,high phase synchronization,millisecond phase shift,enhanced phase synchrony,alpha frequency,phase synchrony,neuronal coordination,millisecond phase lag,alpha band,meditation,ground state,alpha phase synchrony,brain integration,binding,alpha eeg,cortical integration theory,transcendental meditation,cognitive function,functional integration,phase shift,time domain,information transfer,phase synchronization,cognitive process
Alpha (ethology),Neuroscience,Control theory,Phase synchronization,Consciousness,Meditation,Cognition,Sensory system,Mathematics,Electroencephalography,Alertness
Journal
Volume
Issue
ISSN
85
11
Signal Processing
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
7
0.70
3
Authors
5
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Russell Hebert170.70
Dietrich Lehmann224021.63
Gabriel Tan370.70
Fred Travis470.70
Alarik Arenander570.70