![]() focus on the achievement of the outcomes–objectively if that’s how the problem is defined (e.g. don’t decide for your client what his/her training goals should be work with clients to establish clear desired outcomes ģ. don’t mess around with someone else’s brain until you have some idea what it is already doing Ģ. The standard of care I teach people, whether professional or lay, is as follows:ġ. BTW, that holds for licensed professionals as well–more than a few of whom I’ve seen jump in with, I guess, the assumption that the fact that they were licensed and a professional meant that they’d be able to be effective brain trainers. I’ve talked a lot more people OUT of trying to do EEG at home than I’ve talked into it. I do indeed fully support home users as long as they go into things with eyes wide open. And ideally you would have some kind of mentor or support person who could help you learn the basic skills of finding sites, placing electrodes for a clean signal, recognizing and minimizing artifact and running the software without corrupting the training. Ideally you would also have some kind of evaluation that would tell you what was going on in your brain, so the things you train have a greater likelihood of resulting in the effects you wish to achieve. You need software (BioExplorer) to allow you to choose what frequencies to train, with what targets and what kind of feedback. You need an amplifier to clean and magnify those signals and send them to the computer (your Pendant) You need some kind of acquisition device (electrodes) to pick up the signals from your head. You need three things to do neurofeedback–and ideally would have two more. “If it works, keep doing it.” Tools for Neurofeedback “You’re not training the mind, you’re training the brain.”Ģ. Category General Thoughts Basic Rules of Neurofeedback.ġ. ![]()
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