Reuter B M, Linke D B, Kurthen M
Neurochirurgische Universitätsklinik Bonn.
EEG EMG Z Elektroenzephalogr Elektromyogr Verwandte Geb. 1992 Jun;23(2):62-6.
A coherent EEG-rhythm occurring in the 40 Hz range has been shown to correlate with cognitive processes of attention in a large number of studies. We intended to evaluate whether this frequency is of specific functional significance, and whether it may represent a rhythm of excitability for cognitive processes. The model of a rhythm of excitability assumes the 40 Hz-EEG to be a timer and organizer for information processing. Event-related potentials of 12 healthy normal subjects were recorded in an experiment of attention (auditory click stimulation). In order to evaluate whether the phases of the 40 Hz-EEG represent a rhythm of excitability, responses to stimuli having similar phases at the beginning of the stimulus were selected and averaged. An effect of the different 40 Hz-phases could not be demonstrated on the amplitude and latency of N100 and P200, components of the event-related potential associated with information processing. These findings suggest that a possible timer for cognitive processes of attention is not linked to the phases of the 40 Hz-surface-EEG.