Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience (Oct 2022)

The development of peak alpha frequency from infancy to adolescence and its role in visual temporal processing: A meta-analysis

  • Julie Freschl,
  • Lina Al Azizi,
  • Lilyann Balboa,
  • Zsuzsa Kaldy,
  • Erik Blaser

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 57
p. 101146

Abstract

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While it has been shown that alpha frequency increases over development (Stroganova et al., 1999), a precise trajectory has not yet been specified, making it challenging to constrain theories linking alpha rhythms to perceptual development. We conducted a comprehensive review of studies measuring resting-state occipital peak alpha frequency (PAF, the frequency exhibiting maximum power) from birth to 18 years of age. From 889 potentially relevant studies, we identified 40 reporting PAF (109 samples; 3882 subjects). A nonlinear regression revealed that PAF increases quickly in early childhood (from 6.1 Hz at 6 months to 8.4 Hz at 5 years) and levels off in adolescence (9.7 Hz at 13 years), with an asymptote at 10.1 Hz. We found no effect of resting state procedure (eyes-open versus eyes-closed) or biological sex. PAF has been implicated as a clock on visual temporal processing, with faster frequencies associated with higher visual temporal resolution. Psychophysical studies have shown that temporal resolution reaches adult levels by 5 years of age (Freschl et al., 2019, 2020). The fact that PAF reaches the adult range of 8–12 Hz by that age strengthens the link between PAF and temporal resolution.

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