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"In my view this book is an essential reference for all EEG
workers." From review by Dr. H. R. A. Townsend in J.
Electrophysiological Technology, 2004, 30(1): 31-33. "This book
highlights that current knowledge about alpha activity is as yet
incomplete and thus will remain a subject of considerable
scientific research. This book is an appropriate reference tool,
not only for experienced researchers, but also for young
neuroscientists and students. It should also help to stimulate the
interest of scientists to design new experiments and devise new
concepts." From review by Alexander A. Fingelkurts and Andrew A.
Fingelkurts in Clinical Neurophysiology, 2004, 115(8): 1944-1945.
This book is the first to review the whole field of the Alpha
rhythm component of the electroencephalogram (EEG). It reviews the
classical studies from the 1930s through the 1980s when EEG
research became dominated by event-related potential studies.
Renewed interest in the alpha rhythm developed in the 1990s when
neuronal oscillations became a major focus of interest in the
neurophysiology of brain function. Many of the later studies of
alpha activity that resulted from this development are fully
documented in the book. Three main themes are presented throughout
the book. First, the recognition of the ubiquitous nature of the
alpha rhythm such that there are multiple sites of alpha rhythm
generation in the brain, many only being detected by using
appropriate signal analysis techniques. This has resulted in the
recognition of 'alpha activities', in place of the classical
unitary alpha rhythm. Second, the attempts to use a hemisphere
function model to relate alpha activity response to mental activity
and inter-individual variation are critically reviewed and shown to
be equivocal. In particular the significance of independent alpha
components within the alpha frequency band is described. Third,
both classical and new ideas about the generation of the EEG,
particularly alpha activity, are reviewed and some new concepts
about its functional significance are presented. There is currently
extensive interest in the brain, particularly in relation to the
concept of consciousness. Therefore, many chapters include
introductory material relating to neuroscience, neuropsychology and
psychophysiology. There is also a critique of the use of alpha
activity in biofeedback, hypnosis and meditation. Because EEG
research is very dependent on advances in the technology of EEG
measurement, an introduction to this technology is included as an
appendix. A second appendix describes the historical origin of the
concept of desynchronisation.
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