From: Jens K. <jn...@gm...> - 2021-04-03 08:59:40
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Hi Laura, my experience with neurofeedback is mainly as a patient of severe early childhood brain trauma. In my opinion the main source of confusion in the field originates in a lack of differentiation: Broadly speaking, there are two very different kinds of neurofeedbacktrainig: 1. The generalized way: trainig each participant's brain to match a statistical average. That's done by most providers. It's a little bit scalable and sometimes has some useful effect. 2. The individualized approach (Sebern Fisher, Jim Hardt): totally unscalable; therefore expensive; with allegedly spectacular results. Perhaps this is of some use to you. Regards Jens 2021-04-03 10:03 GMT+02:00, Stefan Jung <bio...@gm...>: > Hi Laura > > This site is DEAD. It feels like a lifetime ago that I last posted here > > Firstly, I think you should speak / search Neurofeedback (NFB) rather than > biofeedback. > > If someone tells me he is interested in biofeedback I think about: > > - Hand temperature biofeedback to reduce migraines > - GSR / SCL skin resistance biofeedback for meditation, hypertension, etc > - HRV (Heart Rate Variance), for similar uses as SCL > - etc. > > Here are three group recommendations: > > Brain-trainer > brain-trainer.com run by Peter van Deusen. Peter used to be a hospital > administrator (I think), many years ago in the US. I think the man must > have at least 20 years of NFB experience by now. Very helpful and > knowledgeable. For the last few years he has been operating from > Brazil. He has a very active community and a forum where they discuss > various NFB applications, etc. > > OpenBCI > https://openbci.com/ > Their main goal is to use BCI ( Brain Computer Interfacing) for command and > control. For instance, a handycaped person that can control a wheelchair > or computer with a BCI interface. > > OpenVIBE > http://openvibe.inria.fr/ > A research organisation based in France > They seem to concentrate on the software layer running on various BCI > equipment. Not sure how active they are these days. > > Regards > Stefan > |