"now concentration on something and the Alpha goes away - almost completely - and that's called Alpha Synchronization and it has to do with different brain regions causing interference that causes Alpha to disappear."
So we use that as a marker to see how much Alpha was present when the person was doing the task in the concentration period.
We'd typically ask someone to concentrate on the Double Slit or some other target for 20 or 30 seconds.
It turns out to do that in a One Pointed Form of concentration is very difficult.
Even experienced meditators can do it for Five or Ten seconds - you need very unusual people who can absolutely maintain the SAME attention for even 20 or 30 seconds.
But nevertheless you can use the performance results of the experiment - how well they were able to collapse the wavefunction (so-called) and compare that against how long they were able to sustain their attention.
So if attention is in fact one of the important factors - you should find a positive relationship between their ability to concentrate as measured by their EEG and their performance of the task. And in fact that is what we've found in several different kinds of EEG and several different measures and several different kinds of experiments.
It seems to be a secondary way to show - the ability to focus the mind - as a symptom - and that would also not be expected -
This is fascinating because the only time in my life when I had an EEG the nurse exclaimed in surprise at how strong my ALPHA brain waves were! I realized this was from my music training - this was around 1992 - so way before I had practice meditation but soon after my intensive music training.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F2mQLuFxWGY&ab_channel=metaRising
So this ties into Harold Atmanspacher's study of Noncommutative Phase Perception.
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