Table 7.
Author and Year | Sample | Methods | IGF Measure | Relevant Findings |
---|---|---|---|---|
Purcell et al., 2004 [31] | 38 healthy adults | EEG, auditory steady-state stimulation, gap detection task | Amplitude | IGF in young (18–43): 41 ± 5 Hz; IGF in old (60–78): 37 ± 4 Hz. Positive correlation of IGF with frequency modulation detection (r = 0.72), negative correlation with gap detection latency (r = −0.43) |
Baltus and Herrmann 2015 [41] | 35 healthy adults | EEG, auditory steady-state stimulation, gap detection task | Amplitude | IGF: 46.5 ± 6.38 Hz. Negative correlation of IGF with gap detection threshold (r = −0.46) |
Baltus et al., 2020 [83] | 16 healthy adults | EEG, tACS, auditory steady-state stimulation, gap detection task | Amplitude | IGF: ~35–60 Hz. Negative correlation of IGF with gap detection threshold (rho = −0.6). Positive correlation of IGF with change in performance after tACS in the experimental group (rho = 0.81), but not in the control group |
da Silva et al., 2021 [109] | 31 healthy children: 16 with musical training, 15 without musical training | EEG, motor and music-related tasks | Power | Over F3-F4 channels, IGF in musically trained: 35 Hz; IGF in musically untrained: 33 Hz |
Abbreviations: EEG—electroencephalogram; IGF—individual gamma frequency; tACS—transcranial alternating current stimulation.