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Investigations of human EEG response to viewing fractal patterns
Hagerhall, C.M.; Laike, T.; Taylor, R.P.; Küller, M.; Küller, R.; Martin, T.P. (2008). Investigations of human EEG response to viewing fractal patterns. Perception 37(10): 1488-1494. https://dx.doi.org/10.1068/p5918
In: Perception. SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD: London. ISSN 0301-0066; e-ISSN 1468-4233, more
Peer reviewed article  

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  • Hagerhall, C.M.
  • Laike, T.
  • Taylor, R.P.
  • Küller, M.
  • Küller, R.
  • Martin, T.P.

Abstract
    Owing to the prevalence of fractal patterns in natural scenery and their growing impact on cultures around the world, fractals constitute a common feature of our daily visual experiences, raising an important question: what responses do fractals induce in the observer? We monitored subjects' EEG while they were viewing fractals with different fractal dimensions, and the results show that significant effects could be found in the EEG even by employing relatively simple silhouette images. Patterns with a fractal dimension of 1.3 elicited the most interesting EEG, with the highest alpha in the frontal lobes but also the highest beta in the parietal area, pointing to a complicated interplay between different parts of the brain when experiencing this pattern.

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