Effortful Listening Produces Both Enhancement and Suppression of Alpha in the EEG
Matthew G. Wisniewski, Alexandria C. Zakrzewski
Abstract
Introduction: , but inconsistencies regarding the direction of the relationship are abundant. We performed source analyses on high-density EEG data collected during a speech-on-speech listening task to address the possibility that opposing alpha power relationships among alpha producing brain sources drive this inconsistency. Methods: =20) heard two simultaneously presented sentences of the form: Ready <call sign> go to <color> <number> now. They either reported the color/number pair of a "Baron" call sign sentence (active: high effort), or ignored the stimuli (passive: low effort). Independent component analysis (ICA) was used to segregate temporally distinct sources in the EEG. Results: Analysis of independent components (ICs) revealed simultaneous alpha enhancements (e.g., for somatomotor mu ICs) and suppressions (e.g., for left temporal ICs) for different brain sources. The active condition exhibited stronger enhancement for left somatomotor mu rhythm ICs, but stronger suppression for central occipital ICs. Discussion: This study shows both alpha enhancement and suppression to be associated with increases in listening effort. Literature inconsistencies could partially relate to some source activities overwhelming others in scalp recordings.