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Teaching People To Control Their Brainwaves Can Boost Their Attention, Too (MIT)

 

An original story for MIT, published December 6, 2019.

Having trouble paying attention? MIT neuroscientists may have a solution for you: Turn down your alpha brain waves. In a new study, the researchers found that people can enhance their attention by controlling their own alpha brain waves based on neurofeedback they receive as they perform a particular task.

The study found that when subjects learned to suppress alpha waves in one hemisphere of their parietal cortex, they were able to pay better attention to objects that appeared on the opposite side of their visual field. This is the first time that this cause-and-effect relationship has been seen, and it suggests that it may be possible for people to learn to improve their attention through neurofeedback.

"There's a lot of interest in using neurofeedback to try to help people with various brain disorders and behavioral problems," says Robert Desimone, director of MIT's McGovern Institute for Brain Research. "It's a completely noninvasive way of controlling and testing the role of different types of brain activity."

It's unknown how long these effects might last and whether this kind of control could be achieved with other types of brain waves, such as beta waves, which are linked to Parkinson's disease. The researchers are now planning additional studies of whether this type of neurofeedback training might help people suffering from attentional or other neurological disorders.

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I do alpha up training in the posterior brain right hemisphere (T4 -P4). 

If you have had a lot of childhood trauma and now possess a hyper-vigilant brain, the alpha waves in the back of the brain can be too low and don’t go up when you close your eyes (they are supposed to go up when you close your eyes because you have blocked visual stimuli)... at least for me.  So I’ve been working on this. 

I have also been working on integrating the right and left hemispheres.  These often don’t work together in developmental trauma.

I wish I had access to Neurofeedback 30 years ago when I was in foster care and before I went to medical school.  My personal experience is that you cannot build an integrated self as an adult if you didn’t get this in childhood w/o Neurofeedback. 

 

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