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Doubting Neurofeedback Double Blind

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SeminarPast EventNeuroscience

Doubting the neurofeedback double-blind do participants have residual awareness of experimental purposes in neurofeedback studies?

Timo Kvamme

Dr

Aarhus University

Schedule
Monday, August 7, 2023

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Monday, August 7, 2023

4:00 PM Asia/Tokyo

Host: Consciousness Club Tokyo

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Consciousness Club Tokyo

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Abstract

Neurofeedback provides a feedback display which is linked with on-going brain activity and thus allows self-regulation of neural activity in specific brain regions associated with certain cognitive functions and is considered a promising tool for clinical interventions. Recent reviews of neurofeedback have stressed the importance of applying the “double-blind” experimental design where critically the patient is unaware of the neurofeedback treatment condition. An important question then becomes; is double-blind even possible? Or are subjects aware of the purposes of the neurofeedback experiment? – this question is related to the issue of how we assess awareness or the absence of awareness to certain information in human subjects. Fortunately, methods have been developed which employ neurofeedback implicitly, where the subject is claimed to have no awareness of experimental purposes when performing the neurofeedback. Implicit neurofeedback is intriguing and controversial because it runs counter to the first neurofeedback study, which showed a link between awareness of being in a certain brain state and control of the neurofeedback-derived brain activity. Claiming that humans are unaware of a specific type of mental content is a notoriously difficult endeavor. For instance, what was long held as wholly unconscious phenomena, such as dreams or subliminal perception, have been overturned by more sensitive measures which show that degrees of awareness can be detected. In this talk, I will discuss whether we will critically examine the claim that we can know for certain that a neurofeedback experiment was performed in an unconscious manner. I will present evidence that in certain neurofeedback experiments such as manipulations of attention, participants display residual degrees of awareness of experimental contingencies to alter their cognition.

Topics

attentionawarenessbrain activitycognitionconsciousnessdouble-blindexperimental designimplicit neurofeedbackneurofeedbackself-regulation

About the Speaker

Timo Kvamme

Dr

Aarhus University

Contact & Resources

Personal Website

www.linkedin.com/in/timo-kvamme-a6035ba8/

@TimoKvamme

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twitter.com/TimoKvamme

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