Recent findings suggested that the choice of the EEG reference
might be a critical issue for the study of anterior asymmetry
in the alpha band. The present paper investigates the validity
of different reference schemes for the measurement of alpha
asymmetry. A 32-channel resting EEG was recorded with a common
vertex reference (Cz), and transformed into computer-averaged
ears (A1 + A2), average reference (AR), and current source density
derivations. A correlation analysis of an alpha asymmetry measure
between all derivation schemes indicated a poor convergent validity
for anterior sites but an excellent convergent validity for
posterior sites. Further analyses suggested the presence of
substantial alpha activity at the various reference sites (Cz,
A1 + A2, AR), which might be similar in magnitude to anterior
but smaller than posterior alpha. These findings suggest that
the validity of a reference scheme is a function of the
signal-to-noise ratio of the electrical activities at target
and reference sites. The limitations of each reference scheme
for the measurement of anterior alpha asymmetry are discussed.