Toward a Functional Taxonomy of Brain Oscillations: Replacing the Arbitrary DTABG System with Biologically Meaningful Nomenclature
Discuss this preprint
Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?Listed in
This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.Abstract
The current Delta-Theta-Alpha-Beta-Gamma (DTABG) naming system for neural oscillations fails to capture the functional significance, cross-species conservation, and harmonic relationships that define these rhythms. This system represents an historical artifact rather than a scientifically principled framework, obscuring the functional architecture of neural oscillations and their evolutionary conservation across mammalian species. We propose a new taxonomy based on primary biological functions, cross-frequency coupling dynamics, and recent discoveries of precise octave relationships in electromagnetic field resonance. Building on Klimesch's Binary Hierarchy Brain Body Oscillation Theory and emerging understanding of electromagnetic field computing, we demonstrate that neural oscillations organize in precise 1:2 harmonic relationships that optimize information transfer through field resonance. The proposed functional nomenclature uses Sanskrit bija (seed) mantras whose traditional meanings align with biological functions: Om (brain-body coupling, 0.01-0.1 Hz), Lam (deep restoration, <1 Hz), Vam (integration, ~2.5 Hz), Ram (organizing/memory, ~5 Hz), Yam (motor simulation, ~8-12 Hz), Ham (attention, ~10 Hz), Sam (sleep/memory consolidation, ~12-14 Hz), Gam (control, ~20 Hz), Tam (binding, ~40 Hz), Krim (high-frequency processing, 80-200 Hz), and Shrim (ultra-high frequency, >200 Hz). This comprehensive framework, grounded in the physics of electromagnetic field resonance and binary frequency architecture, better serves neuroscience research, clinical practice, and our fundamental understanding of brain function across the complete spectrum of neural oscillations.