Spatiotemporal organization of brain dynamics and intelligence: an EEG study in adolescents |
Author(s):
,Journal/Book: Int J Psychophysiol. 1999; 33: PO Box 211, 1000 AE Amsterdam, Netherlands. Elsevier Science Bv. 259-273.
Abstract: This study investigated relationships between global dynamics of brain electric activity and intelligence. EEG was recorded monopolarly from 10 symmetric leads (10-20 system) in 37 (17 males) healthy subjects (mean age 13.7 years) at rest and during performance of two visually presented cognitive tasks, verbal (semantic grouping) and spatial (mental rotation). On another occasion, the subjects were administered the Intelligence Structure Test (IST). Both total IST score and some individual subtests of specific abilities showed significant positive correlations with EEG coherence in the theta band and significant negative relationships with EEG dimension, a measure of complexity and unpredictability of neural oscillatory dynamics underlying the EEG time series. Furthermore, EEG coherence and dimensional complexity were inversely related. Taken together, these EEG metrics accounted for over 30% of the variability of the total IST score in this sample. No significant effects of the task type (spatial vs. Verbal) or specific abilities were observed. Long-distance theta coherence between frontal and parieto-occipital areas showed the most consistent relationship with cognitive abilities. The results suggest that order to chaos ratio in task-related brain dynamics may be one of the biological factors underlying individual differences in cognitive abilities in adolescents.
Note: Article Anokhin AP, Washington Univ, Sch Med, Dept Psychiat, 40 N Kingshighway, Suite 1, St Louis,MO 63110 USA
Keyword(s): EEG; coherence; dimensional complexity; intelligence; cognitive tasks; THETA-SYNCHRONIZATION; COMPLEXITY; COHERENCE; MEMORY; ALPHA; DIMENSION; CHAOS; CORTEX
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