面对基本方向时的脑电图模式和表现

F. Travis, Jonathan B. Lipman, Niyazi Parim, Peter L. Hodak, Jacqueline J. Leete
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引用次数: 1

摘要

1) 背景和目的:啮齿类动物丘脑、海马和内嗅皮层的放电与空间位置和时间的流逝有关。据报道,在自由移动的猴子身上发现了头部方向细胞,在人类玩导航视频游戏时和对电磁场变化的反应中观察到了不同的大脑模式。生物体对环境和电磁信号的敏感性可以解释传统建筑系统Vastu建筑的建议,该系统建议将房屋与基本方向对齐。2) 假设:瓦斯图建筑预测面向东方和北方比面向西方和南方更有优势。如果朝东和朝北更有利,那么与向西或向南相比,受试者在朝东和向北时应该表现出不同的脑电图模式和更好的表现。3) 材料和方法:在受试者面对四个主要方向时,比较32通道脑电图的连贯模式和完成拼图的时间。4) 结果:当面对东方和北方时,受试者的额叶beta2和gamma EEG连贯性显著较高,并且他们组装拼图的速度显著快于面对西方或南方时。5) 讨论:大脑的发现与表现数据相符。更好的聚焦与更快的性能合理相关,与更高水平的β2和γ相干相关。6) 结论:这些数据支持了人类大脑可能对基本方向敏感的可能性。这突出了我们与环境的紧密联系,并提出了一个在确定工作空间和设计教室时可能很重要的因素。
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EEG Patterns and Performance When Facing the Cardinal Directions
1) Background and Objectives: Position in space and passage of time are encoded in the firing of thalamic, hippocampal and entorhinal cortices in rodents. Head direction cells have been reported in freely moving monkeys, and differential brain patterns have been observed in humans while playing a navigation video game and in response to changes in electromagnetic fields. The sensitivity of organisms to environmental and electromagnetic cues could explain recommendations from a traditional system of architecture, Vastu architecture, which recommends aligning homes to the cardinal directions. 2) Hypothesis: Vastu architecture predicts that facing east and north are more advantageous than facing west and south. If facing east and north are more advantageous, then subjects should show distinct EEG patterns and improved performance when facing east and north compared to west or south. 3) Materials and Methods: EEG coherence patterns from 32-channel EEG and time-to-complete jigsaw puzzles were compared while subjects faced the four cardinal directions. 4) Results: When facing east and north, subjects’ frontal beta2 and gamma EEG coherence were significantly higher, and they assembled jigsaw puzzles significantly faster than when facing west or south. 5) Discussion: The brain findings fit the performance data. Better focus, which would reasonably be related with faster performance, is associated with higher levels of beta2 and gamma coherence. 6) Conclusion: These data support the possibility that the human brain may be sensitive to cardinal directions. This highlights how intimately we are connected to the environment and suggests a factor that may be important in orienting work spaces and designing class rooms.
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