Jackson Cionek
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When Alpha Meets Theta: Cross-Frequency Dynamics in Working Memory

When Alpha Meets Theta: Cross-Frequency Dynamics in Working Memory

The study by Rodriguez-Larios, Roberts, and Haegens (2026) revisits a central question in cognitive neuroscience: how different brain rhythms coordinate to sustain working memory. Specifically, the authors investigate the cross-frequency dynamics between alpha oscillations (≈8–12 Hz) and theta oscillations (≈4–8 Hz)—a mechanism often proposed to organize cognitive processing in time.

Working memory refers to the brain’s ability to maintain information temporarily while performing ongoing mental operations, such as reasoning, comparison, planning, or decision-making. Increasing evidence suggests that this ability does not rely on a single brain region but instead depends on distributed fronto-parietal networks coordinated through rhythmic neural activity.

This article revisits the relationship between alpha and theta rhythms and proposes a more nuanced interpretation of how these oscillations interact during working memory tasks.


When Alpha Meets Theta - Cross-Frequency Dynamics in Working Memory
When Alpha Meets Theta
Cross-Frequency Dynamics in Working Memory

What the Study Shows

Traditional models proposed that theta oscillations act as a temporal organizer, with faster rhythms nested within each theta cycle. According to this view, multiple “items” in working memory could be sequentially represented within a single theta cycle through higher-frequency activity.

Rodriguez-Larios and colleagues revisit this hypothesis and argue that the interaction between alpha and theta rhythms is more dynamic and context-dependent than previously assumed.

Among the key insights discussed in the article:

  • Alpha–theta interactions do not occur as a rigid or fixed mechanism

  • Different working memory tasks recruit distinct patterns of cross-frequency coordination

  • Some effects previously attributed to cross-frequency coupling may reflect changes in oscillatory power or temporal alignment of neural populations

This suggests that working memory depends less on fixed oscillatory hierarchies and more on flexible coordination among neural rhythms.


A Decolonial Neuroscience Perspective

From a Decolonial Neuroscience perspective, this work challenges the reductionist idea that cognition can be explained through isolated modules or fixed neural computations.

Working memory increasingly appears as a dynamic process emerging from coordinated temporal activity across distributed brain systems.

This interpretation resonates with the concept of the Damasian Mind, where mental processes arise from the integration of interoception, proprioception, perception, and action (Damasio, 2018). Even apparently abstract cognitive functions—such as holding a number in mind—depend on temporal coordination between neural and bodily systems.

In this sense, alpha and theta rhythms can be understood as temporal architectures that allow different brain systems to coordinate their activity across time.


APUS and Body–Territory Coordination

The conceptual avatar that best aligns with this study is APUS, associated with extended proprioception and body–territory coupling.

Working memory is not simply an internal storage buffer. Instead, it helps maintain the organism’s orientation within a field of possible actions.

The coordination between alpha and theta rhythms may represent a neural mechanism that synchronizes attention, perception, and readiness for action.

From this perspective, working memory becomes a temporary state of organization of the body within a cognitive territory, rather than a purely abstract computational space.


Connections with Tensional Selves and Functional States

The dynamics observed in this study can also be interpreted through the framework of Tensional Selves, which describe functional states of the mind in relation to environmental demands.

Zone 1
Everyday operational state. Working memory supports practical tasks such as holding instructions, comparing options, and organizing actions.

Zone 2
State of flow and creative reorganization. Neural coordination becomes more flexible, enabling novel associations and insight.

Zone 3
State of cognitive rigidity or overload, where working memory may become captured by fixed narratives or stress-driven patterns.

Alpha and theta rhythms may act as neural mechanisms that stabilize or flexibilize these states, regulating the balance between cognitive control and openness to new information.


DREX Citizen and Collective Cognitive Metabolism

Although the study focuses on neurophysiology, it also allows a broader social analogy.

Working memory performance depends on energetic stability and functional balance within neural systems. Chronic stress and uncertainty can reduce the brain’s capacity to maintain and manipulate information effectively.

Within the concept of DREX Citizen, ensuring a minimal level of economic stability for individuals can be interpreted as a form of metabolic support for the social body, analogous to how stable energy supports cellular functioning.

Societies that reduce chronic uncertainty may foster greater cognitive flexibility, creativity, and collective decision-making capacity.


New Questions for BrainLatam

  1. Do physiological states such as breathing rhythms, HRV, or CO₂ levels modulate alpha–theta dynamics during working memory tasks?

  2. Does alpha–theta coordination change when memory tasks are performed collaboratively rather than individually?

  3. Can bodily rhythms, such as respiration or heart rate, synchronize with neural oscillations involved in working memory?

  4. Do Zone 2 states (flow and fruição) show different alpha–theta coupling patterns compared to stress-driven cognitive states?

  5. Could hyperscanning studies reveal cross-person synchronization of alpha–theta dynamics during cooperative tasks?


Possible Experimental Designs

Future research could combine EEG, fNIRS, HRV, and respiratory measurements during working memory tasks performed both individually and collectively.

Another promising direction would involve studying musicians, dancers, or cooperative teams, where working memory, attention, and bodily coordination operate simultaneously.

Researchers could also investigate how regulated physiological states, such as slow and stable breathing, influence alpha–theta dynamics during complex cognitive tasks.


BrainLatam Conclusion

The study by Rodriguez-Larios and colleagues reinforces a key principle of contemporary neuroscience: cognition emerges from the dynamic coordination of distributed neural rhythms.

Working memory is not merely a localized brain function but a temporally organized interaction among multiple neural networks.

From a Decolonial Neuroscience perspective, understanding these rhythms means recognizing that the mind is not simply abstract computation—it is body, time, and territory organized in motion.


References

Rodriguez-Larios, J., Roberts, M. J., & Haegens, S. (2026).
Revisiting cross-frequency alpha–theta dynamics during working memory.
Cerebral Cortex, 36(1), bhaf344. https://doi.org/10.1093/cercor/bhaf344

Damasio, A. (2018).
The Strange Order of Things: Life, Feeling, and the Making of Cultures.
Pantheon Books.

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Jackson Cionek

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