Simultaneous biofeedback of heart rate and frontal EMG as a pretraining for the control of EEG theta activity
- 1 December 1976
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Applied Psychophysiology and Biofeedback
- Vol. 1 (4) , 395-410
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00998772
Abstract
Following one base-line session, 20 normal subjects received four half hour sessions consisting of simultaneous feedback of heart rate and frontalis muscle (pretraining). Ten subjects received contingent (CF), the other ten noncontingent feedback (NCF). Subjects were asked to lower heart rate and frontal muscle tension (EMG). Heart rate within sessions decreased up to 19 bpm, with a mean of 4 bpm for the CF group. There was only a weak decrease over sessions, however, because of the strong habituation effect. The following events accompanied the heart rate decrease: (1) an increase of the variability of the heart rate, (2) a decrease of the variance of the EMG, (3) an increased correlation between heart rate slowing and EMG decrease, and (4) an increasing subjective experience of control of heart rate and EMG. After pretraining, subjects received eight sessions of auditory feedback of their frontal EEG theta activity (four sessions with CF and four sessions with NCF in balanced order). There was a weak increase of theta for the CF condition over sessions, but a decrease within the sessions. Pretraining on heart rate and frontal EMG control had no influence on the performance during theta training. It was hypothesized that control of heart rate slowing and theta control involve different mechanisms.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Differential shaping of EEG theta rhythmsApplied Psychophysiology and Biofeedback, 1976
- Frontalis Muscle Tension and Sleep LatencyPsychophysiology, 1975
- Psychological and Physiological Variables Associated With Large Magnitude Voluntary Heart Rate ChangesPsychophysiology, 1975
- Clinical Applications of Biofeedback TrainingArchives of General Psychiatry, 1974
- Operant Control of Occipital Theta Rhythm Affects Performance in a Radar Monitoring TaskScience, 1974
- Relative independence of conditioned EEG changes from cardiac and respiratory activityPhysiology & Behavior, 1972
- AWARENESS OF EEG‐SUBJECTIVE ACTIVITY RELATIONSHIPS DETECTED WITHIN A CLOSED FEEDBACK SYSTEMPsychophysiology, 1970