EEG Alpha Power Is Modulated by Attentional Changes during Cognitive Tasks and Virtual Reality Immersion

Variations in alpha rhythm have a significant role in perception and attention. Recently, alpha decrease has been associated with externally directed attention, especially in the visual domain, whereas alpha increase has been related to internal processing such as mental arithmetic. However, the rol...

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Main Authors: Elisa Magosso, Francesca De Crescenzio, Giulia Ricci, Sergio Piastra, Mauro Ursino
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hindawi Limited 2019-01-01
Series:Computational Intelligence and Neuroscience
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2019/7051079
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spelling doaj-e851fce10ed347ec8e883091c0eb87dd2020-11-25T01:21:16ZengHindawi LimitedComputational Intelligence and Neuroscience1687-52651687-52732019-01-01201910.1155/2019/70510797051079EEG Alpha Power Is Modulated by Attentional Changes during Cognitive Tasks and Virtual Reality ImmersionElisa Magosso0Francesca De Crescenzio1Giulia Ricci2Sergio Piastra3Mauro Ursino4Department of Electrical, Electronic and Information Engineering “Guglielmo Marconi”, University of Bologna-Campus of Cesena, Via dell’Università 50, Cesena, ItalyDepartment of Industrial Engineering, University of Bologna-Campus of Forlì, via Fontanelle 40, Forlì, ItalyDepartment of Electrical, Electronic and Information Engineering “Guglielmo Marconi”, University of Bologna-Campus of Cesena, Via dell’Università 50, Cesena, ItalyDepartment of Industrial Engineering, University of Bologna-Campus of Forlì, via Fontanelle 40, Forlì, ItalyDepartment of Electrical, Electronic and Information Engineering “Guglielmo Marconi”, University of Bologna-Campus of Cesena, Via dell’Università 50, Cesena, ItalyVariations in alpha rhythm have a significant role in perception and attention. Recently, alpha decrease has been associated with externally directed attention, especially in the visual domain, whereas alpha increase has been related to internal processing such as mental arithmetic. However, the role of alpha oscillations and how the different components of a task (processing of external stimuli, internal manipulation/representation, and task demand) interact to affect alpha power are still unclear. Here, we investigate how alpha power is differently modulated by attentional tasks depending both on task difficulty (less/more demanding task) and direction of attention (internal/external). To this aim, we designed two experiments that differently manipulated these aspects. Experiment 1, outside Virtual Reality (VR), involved two tasks both requiring internal and external attentional components (intake of visual items for their internal manipulation) but with different internal task demands (arithmetic vs. reading). Experiment 2 took advantage of the VR (mimicking an aircraft cabin interior) to manipulate attention direction: it included a condition of VR immersion only, characterized by visual external attention, and a condition of a purely mental arithmetic task during VR immersion, requiring neglect of sensory stimuli. Results show that: (1) In line with previous studies, visual external attention caused a significant alpha decrease, especially in parieto-occipital regions; (2) Alpha decrease was significantly larger during the more demanding arithmetic task, when the task was driven by external visual stimuli; (3) Alpha dramatically increased during the purely mental task in VR immersion, whereby the external stimuli had no relation with the task. Our results suggest that alpha power is crucial to isolate a subject from the environment, and move attention from external to internal cues. Moreover, they emphasize that the emerging use of VR associated with EEG may have important implications to study brain rhythms and support the design of artificial systems.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2019/7051079
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Elisa Magosso
Francesca De Crescenzio
Giulia Ricci
Sergio Piastra
Mauro Ursino
spellingShingle Elisa Magosso
Francesca De Crescenzio
Giulia Ricci
Sergio Piastra
Mauro Ursino
EEG Alpha Power Is Modulated by Attentional Changes during Cognitive Tasks and Virtual Reality Immersion
Computational Intelligence and Neuroscience
author_facet Elisa Magosso
Francesca De Crescenzio
Giulia Ricci
Sergio Piastra
Mauro Ursino
author_sort Elisa Magosso
title EEG Alpha Power Is Modulated by Attentional Changes during Cognitive Tasks and Virtual Reality Immersion
title_short EEG Alpha Power Is Modulated by Attentional Changes during Cognitive Tasks and Virtual Reality Immersion
title_full EEG Alpha Power Is Modulated by Attentional Changes during Cognitive Tasks and Virtual Reality Immersion
title_fullStr EEG Alpha Power Is Modulated by Attentional Changes during Cognitive Tasks and Virtual Reality Immersion
title_full_unstemmed EEG Alpha Power Is Modulated by Attentional Changes during Cognitive Tasks and Virtual Reality Immersion
title_sort eeg alpha power is modulated by attentional changes during cognitive tasks and virtual reality immersion
publisher Hindawi Limited
series Computational Intelligence and Neuroscience
issn 1687-5265
1687-5273
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Variations in alpha rhythm have a significant role in perception and attention. Recently, alpha decrease has been associated with externally directed attention, especially in the visual domain, whereas alpha increase has been related to internal processing such as mental arithmetic. However, the role of alpha oscillations and how the different components of a task (processing of external stimuli, internal manipulation/representation, and task demand) interact to affect alpha power are still unclear. Here, we investigate how alpha power is differently modulated by attentional tasks depending both on task difficulty (less/more demanding task) and direction of attention (internal/external). To this aim, we designed two experiments that differently manipulated these aspects. Experiment 1, outside Virtual Reality (VR), involved two tasks both requiring internal and external attentional components (intake of visual items for their internal manipulation) but with different internal task demands (arithmetic vs. reading). Experiment 2 took advantage of the VR (mimicking an aircraft cabin interior) to manipulate attention direction: it included a condition of VR immersion only, characterized by visual external attention, and a condition of a purely mental arithmetic task during VR immersion, requiring neglect of sensory stimuli. Results show that: (1) In line with previous studies, visual external attention caused a significant alpha decrease, especially in parieto-occipital regions; (2) Alpha decrease was significantly larger during the more demanding arithmetic task, when the task was driven by external visual stimuli; (3) Alpha dramatically increased during the purely mental task in VR immersion, whereby the external stimuli had no relation with the task. Our results suggest that alpha power is crucial to isolate a subject from the environment, and move attention from external to internal cues. Moreover, they emphasize that the emerging use of VR associated with EEG may have important implications to study brain rhythms and support the design of artificial systems.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2019/7051079
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