normal the measurement is. The scale on this report ranges from -3 to +SD. The darker blue represents 3
or more SD below normal, while the lighter blues range from about 2.5 to 1 SD below normal. Blue-green is approximately 0 to 1 SD below normal, while green is baseline normal.
Light green registers at the outer area of normal but is considered from to 1 SD above normal, while yellow and light orange are approximately to 2 SD above normal, darker orange is about 2 to 2.5 SD above normal,
and red is 3 or more SD above normal. (See Figure The Z-Score report
that will be used is called relative power, and it shows information about the amount of energy in the brain at different frequencies. Because green, as explained previously, indicates the normal range, the more green there is in a scan, the more the person is conforming to normal brainwave activity.
Each colored circle(resembling a person’s head when viewed from the top)represents what one person’s brain is doing at each brainwave frequency. The circle in the upper-left region of each scan shows the lowest brainwave frequency (in delta brainwaves, and each circle after that depicts a higher and higher brainwave state, moving progressively up to the highest beta brainwaves at the bottom-right region. A cycle per second in brainwave frequency is known as hertz, or Hz. From left to right and from top to bottom, it progresses from 1 to 4 cycles per second (delta) to 4 to 8
cycles per second(theta) to 8 to 13 cycles per second (alpha) to 13 to plus cycles per second (low mid-range and high-range beta. The beta activity can be broken down into different frequency bands, such as 12 to 15 Hz, 15 to Hz, 18 to 25 Hz, and 25 to 30 Hz.
Therefore, the relative colors in each area show what’s happening in each different brainwave state. For example, a lot of blue in a majority of the brain in 1 cycle per second of delta suggests that there’s little activity of the brain in that delta range. And if there’s a lot of red in 14 Hz alpha in the frontal lobe, it means that there’s heightened alpha activity in that area of the brain.
It should also be understood that these measurements could be interpreted differently depending on what the subject is doing when the scan is taken. For example, if 1
Hz delta were depicted in blue, that would suggest that the energy in the brain at that frequency is 3 SD below normal. Ina clinical sense, that might be interpreted as being abnormally low. But because it was recorded when the subject was meditating, such a scan would actually suggest that the 1 Hz delta had opened the door to a stronger connection to the collective conscious energy field. In other words, as the energy in the neocortex is turned way down, the autonomic nervous system is more readily accessed.
In just a bit, you’ll see several
231
examples that will make all of this clear. In the meantime, glance at
Figure 10.3
again. It will give you an overview to illustrate what I’ve just explained.
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