The prospect of future treatment warrants the development of cost-effective screening for Alzheimer's disease (AD). A promising candidate in this regard is electroencephalography (EEG), as it is one of the most economic imaging modalities. Recent efforts in EEG analysis have shifted towards leveraging spatial information, employing novel frameworks such as graph signal processing or graph neural networks. Here, we systematically investigate the importance of spatial information relative to spectral or temporal information by varying the proportion of each dimension for AD classification. To do so, we test various dimension resolution configurations on two routine EEG datasets. We find that spatial information is consistently more relevant than temporal information and equally relevant as spectral information. These results emphasise the necessity to consider spatial information for EEG-based AD classification. On our second dataset, we further find that well-balanced feature resolutions boost classification accuracy by up to 1.6%. Our resolution-based feature extraction has the potential to improve AD classification specifically, and multivariate signal classification generally.