Neuron
Volume 105, Issue 3, 5 February 2020, Pages 577-587.e5
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Article
Alpha Synchrony and the Neurofeedback Control of Spatial Attention

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuron.2019.11.001Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Subjects learn to control alpha synchrony in left versus right parietal cortex

  • Modulation of alpha synchrony causes a spatial bias in visual processing

  • Attentional bias persists even after neurofeedback training

  • Alpha synchrony plays a causal role in modulating attention and visual processing

Summary

Decreases in alpha synchronization are correlated with enhanced attention, whereas alpha increases are correlated with inattention. However, correlation is not causality, and synchronization may be a byproduct of attention rather than a cause. To test for a causal role of alpha synchrony in attention, we used MEG neurofeedback to train subjects to manipulate the ratio of alpha power over the left versus right parietal cortex. We found that a comparable alpha asymmetry developed over the visual cortex. The alpha training led to corresponding asymmetrical changes in visually evoked responses to probes presented in the two hemifields during training. Thus, reduced alpha was associated with enhanced sensory processing. Testing after training showed a persistent bias in attention in the expected directions. The results support the proposal that alpha synchrony plays a causal role in modulating attention and visual processing, and alpha training could be used for testing hypotheses about synchrony.

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