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This article appeared in Men's
Fitness magazine...
I'm sitting in a small room
playing a video game. A PacMannish icon is moving
through a maze, beeping every time he eats a
little dot. But this particular computer game
isn't run by the movement of my hand on a joystick;
it's powered by sensors on my skull and forehead
that are reading the electrical impulses coming
out of my brain. Every time the figure moves
along the screen, it's an indication that my
brain waves have reached a certain "ideal" frequency.
The term biofeedback was coined
20 years ago to describe procedures first developed
in the 1940s. Back then, it meant measuring
certain physical responses - say, your body
temperature or blood pressure - and feeding
back a series of sounds or lights when those
responses indicate that you are starting to
become more relaxed. But this more complex version,
known as EEG biofeedback or neurofeedback, uses
computer technology to measure your brain waves
and "reward" you for reaching frequencies that
are considered healthful. While the most prominent
application of neurofeedback has been to aid
kids with attention-deficit disorder, it also
has the potential to help adults reduce depression,
anxiety and insomnia, improve concentration
and perform better in certain sports. If you're
stressed out, moody or just want to improve
your golf game, training your brain may be the
key.
Hitting the waves
At any given time, electrical
charges cycle through your brain at different
speeds. From slowest to fastest, these are classified
as delta (occurring mainly during deep sleep);
theta (the border between sleep and wakefulness);
alpha (meditation or deep thought); and beta
(alertness, or, in the fastest range, anxiety
or hyperactivity).
Researchers believe that
the brain can rev too high, causing stressful
feelings, or too low, triggering depression.
Problems also arise when there are too many
high and low rates without enough of the healthier
middle frequencies, says Judy Chiswell, performance-enhancement
program director at EEG Spectrum, a Southern
California neurofeedback center. Training the
brain to operate at what some consider its optimal
waking frequency - in the low-middle beta range
- will theoretically resolve those problems.
This is done through programs that translate
your brain waves into symbols, from those simple
PacMan icons to more complex representations,
and reward you with points and beeps whenever
you multiply your mid-range beta waves while
suppressing waves in the outer ranges.
Another aspect of the training,
known as "alpha-theta," helps you access those
low-range frequencies. The intent is to bring
about a dreamlike condition similar to deep
meditation, a perfect setting for affirmations
and visualizations directed at your subconscious.
("See yourself getting plenty of deep, restful
sleep," my siesta-deprived mind was told.)
By getting people to achieve
these states, first in a clinic and eventually
on their own, neurofeedback practitioners believe
they can treat a variety of ailments, from mood
disorders to alcoholism to head injuries. "Different
conditions are associated with different disregulations
of the brain waves," says Jarvin Heiman, MD,
a psychiatrist in Santa Monica, California.
"We're able to help remediate that disregulation
and balance things, resulting in substantive
relief. And because we're training the brain
waves, over a period of time that relief holds."
Sports on the brain.
What if you're more interested
in achievement than alleviation? After all,
winning has as much to do with what's going
on in your head as how you move your body. Focus,
concentration and staying calm under pressure
can all make the difference between a decent
player and a champion.
In 1991, Arizona State University
researchers tried using biofeedback to create
the optimal brain-wave patterns shown by successful
archers. "We knew from previous research that
when archers hit their shots, they were increasing
alpha waves in the left hemispheres of their
brains," says Dan Landers, PhD, a regent's professor
in exercise science. One group of archers was
placed on a program to increase alpha waves
in the left sides of their brains, and a second
group was trained to increase right-brain alpha
activity. The upshot: The left-side group's
shooting accuracy improved by an average of
two centimeters, while the right-side group
performed considerably worse than before the
training.
A few years later, a North
Carolina research team put 15 golfers on a regimen
that included 10 neurofeedback sessions, visualizations
and actual practice in which the golfers attempted
to re-create the state they had achieved during
the EEG training. Fourteen of the participants
significantly bettered their scores, and 10
of the 12 who underwent further testing showed
development of the so-called "iceberg profile,"
a set of characteristics usually found in top-level
athletes.
Professional golfer Ed Galvan
credits neurofeedback with vastly improving
his game. "It's made me much more focused,"
says Galvan, who now trains other golfers when
he's not competing. "It allows me to hold a
single thought in my mind as long as I need
to."
Galvan began with beta training,
and saw results right away. "After the first
session, I could start to see a dark line going
to the hole. By the third session, i dropped
six strokes." He added alpha-theta training
to increase his confidence. "I told myself I
was the greatest golfer in the world, and I
began believing it. It gave me the feeling that
I could beat anyone."
Galvan has had about 50 neurofeedback
sessions so far. "As soon as I get distracted
or feel a lack of confidence, I go back," he
says. "It's like going to the gym - I work out
until I get back in focus."
Still, you don't have to shoot
arrows or swing a five iron to benefit from
neurofeedback, says Heiman. "It could probably
help with free-throw shooting in basketball
- someone like Shaquille O'Neal could definitely
benefit. Or for a baseball player who needs
to concentrate on a pitch. You could do beta
training for better focus, then do visualizations
in alpha-theta." Gym-goers might improve their
motivation to exercise harder, he adds, "although
you'd have to look at how reasonable the desire
to work out more is, and whether it would lead
to overtraining. If the person does need to
work out more, he could use alphatheta training
to see if there's something holding him back."
Actor David Brooks, a cast
member on the sci-fi TV series Crusade, underwent
neurofeedback sessions to help remember his
lines, then discovered he was making better
use of his time at the gym. "There's a certain
level of patience you need for aerobic workouts,
and the EEG training is helping me with that."
He says his weight training may have improved
as well, "just in terms of my level of concentration,
being able to hang in there and be patient."
The payoff
As for me, I did about 20
sessions - 16 of beta and four of alpha-theta.
So far, I've noticed several benefits: I'm sleeping
better, I feel more awake when I get up in the
morning and, though I still get stressed out
sometimes, my body seems to stay more relaxed.
While my physical tennis game hasn't improved,
I don't seem to get psyched out as easily in
heavy competition. Will it last? Nobody seems
to know. One practitioner suggested that I may
need to come back for regular follow-ups, but
at $50 to $125 per half-hour session, cost is
a major consideration.
At this point, there isn't
a lot of hard information about the use of neurofeedback
for performance, although studies are ongoing.
If you do decide to try it, make sure the sessions
are run by someone you trust. While just about
anyone can learn to use neurofeedback equipment,
that doesn't necessarily mean they have the
experience to provide the assistance you need.
This is especially true with alpha-theta training,
which can lead to uncovering buried memories
or traumas you'd want a therapist to help you
with.
There's a lot more to
be discovered about the many factors that affect
our moods, our thoughts and our skills. Still,
as computers help nudge us into the new millennium,
you may end up riding your own brain waves toward
inner harmony, peace of mind ... and maybe even
a better free throw.
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