Synchronizing brain waves

in a number of blog posts i have shared how wave forms become synchronized in a coherent fashion to transmit specified information through selected synaptic networks to bring about desired actions. It is a top-down function generated, I maintain, by the immaterial cognitive mind to move an extremity, for example. however, there are still many neuroscientists who reduce such cognitive activity to being generated by the material brain with no consideration given for the will of an immaterial mind.

A review article was published on February 19, 2023 entitled “synchronising brain waves key to how and why we pay attention.” researchers at the university of melbourne “have revealed how interactions between electrical waves within the brain may be vital to information processing in the brain. . . . dr. moein esghaei said, ‘coupling lower frequencies of oscillations with higher ones allows fine-tuning the brain and forms the basis for higher cognitive functions, such as selective attention. information arriving at different frequencies from different brain regions may help a target area to select the appropriate input depending upon what one needs to pay attention to,’ said dr. esghaei. . . . the brain’s executive center can attend to a sensory input by simply tuning in to its respective frequency. . . . the attention network, by thus selecting different types of information as required, helps the brain [italics added] to focus on what’s important . . . professor vidyasagar said.”

but note that the researchers do not identify the “executive center” or the “target area” as the immaterial cognitive mind! no, it is believed to be solely a brain function. the researchers do, however, confirm the role of synchronization of frequencies in transmitting specified information encoded within neural spike trains of action potentials, a process discussed in detail in my books and specific blogs.

Stan Lennard