More threads by David Baxter PhD

David Baxter PhD

Late Founder
Read this before paying $100s for neurofeedback therapy
by Christian Jarrett, Ph.D
February 18, 2013

Neurofeedback therapy has promise, but it's no shortcut to enlightenment

Last month, the Sunday Times published a sensationalist article about a London clinic called Brainworks that offers therapy based on EEG feedback – “?1,320 for the standard 12 sessions”. Similar clinics can be found around the world. “Those who have tried it swear it offers inner transformation,” gasped the journalist Jini Reddy, “a profound lessening of anxieties, awakened states, feelings of elation and the focused, clear, calm mind more readily accessed through years of effortful practices.”

EEG (electroencephalography) records the waves of electrical activity emitted by your brain, and the basic idea of neurofeedback therapy is that you have the frequency of these waves shown to you, via sounds or images, so that you can learn to exert some control over them.

Anyone reading the Sunday Times article could be forgiven for thinking they’d been transported to the 60s and 70s. Back then companies with futuristic names like Zygon Corporation cashed in on the discovery that experienced meditators show high levels of alpha brave-waves (8 to 12 hz) when they are in a meditative trance. You could buy a home EEG kit from one of these outfits and teach your brain to achieve this state of “alpha consciousness”.

Unfortunately, the logic is flawed, as the late psychologist and skeptic Barry Beyerstein explained in a series of essays and book chapters published in the 80s and 90s. Just because a meditator in a state of bliss exhibits high levels of alpha waves doesn’t mean those alpha waves are playing a causal role in her state of bliss. As Beyerstein wrote, the correlation no more implies “that alpha wave production can produce a meditative state than opening one’s umbrella can make it rain.”

There are other issues too – Beyerstein’s research showed that the beneficial effects of EEG feedback were related to a person’s belief in the technology, not to any alterations in their brainwaves. Another study showed that people were able to produce high levels of alpha waves even when under threat of mild electric shock from the researchers – hardly a state of Zen-like bliss.

Although the Sunday Times acknowledges the flower-power days of EEG feedback, the message is that the technology has moved on. Christina Lavelle, a partner at Brainworks, is quoted explaining: “The 1990s technology caught up with the concept and there was scientific evidence that it works.” Lavelle adds that neurotherapy allows you to reach “states of mind you can’t normally reach” and that “its effects are permanent”.

These kind of far-fetched claims set my alarm bells ringing. Have things really moved on that much since Beyerstein debunked the industry? I found a useful review from 2009 by David Vernon at Canterbury Christ Church University in England and his colleagues. It’s clear that these researchers are advocates for EEG feedback. Nonetheless, after surveying all the relevant evidence, they concluded: “the notion that alpha neurofeedback can enhance the mood of healthy individuals has yet to be firmly established.” Studies in this area also tend to be poor quality, lacking control groups and proper blinding. This means clients and their trainers usually know who’s receiving the EEG feedback, which brings in placebo-like factors of expectation and motivation. If there’s been a run of good quality new studies over the last couple of years to change this verdict, I couldn’t find them.

If you visit the Brainworks clinic website, you’ll see their therapists are “certified Neurofeedback Specialists”, “backed by seven years intensive study in traditional mind technologies”. It certainly sounds like they know what they’re doing. But in that 2009 review by Vernon and his colleagues, they discuss how there is, as yet, no consensus on the length of time, or intensity, for which brainwave feedback needs to be conducted, in order to produce observable benefits. It’s the same regarding how brainwaves should be fed-back (via visual or auditory means); whether it is beneficial to train to decrease as well as increase alpha waves; or what the desired target frequencies should be. There isn’t even agreement about whether clients should have their eyes open or closed! “Unfortunately,” Vernon and his colleagues confess, “it is not clear at present what the most effective method to achieve [beneficial] changes would be.”

EEG feedback is also used increasingly to treat psychiatric and developmental conditions. The evidence-base is growing, but remains inconsistent and there are the usual concerns about study quality. Probably the most studied and empirically supported condition for using neurofeedback is ADHD. A review published last year concluded that the evidence is promising but not conclusive. Neurofeedback is also touted as a way to achieve cognitive enhancement, for example in sport. I couldn't find a contemporary meta-analysis, but again the evidence appears mixed. Another review (Neurofeedback Evaluation :acrobat:) published by David Vernon in 2005 concluded. "the plethora of claims regarding the use of neurofeedback training to enhance performance is matched only by the paucity of research showing a clear effect."

I don’t doubt that most neurofeedfback therapy clinicians are well-meaning and well-trained. But looking at the literature, it seems there’s good reason to be skeptical about using their techniques, especially as a short-cut to elation and enlightenment.

Most of all, I find it worrying how they present their services to the public. They make grandiose claims, like the brain changes being permanent. They big up their technical wizardry (“Our chairs are based on NASA designs” boasts the Brainworks website). And what's more, they continue to dally with New Age mysticism (Brainworks says their approach brings “spiritual neuroscience firmly into the 21st Century”). Just as in the flower-power days of neurofeedback, they still can’t make up their minds whether to clothe themselves in the white coats of science, or to dress up in the loose robes of woo.
 

gardener

Member
I am a person with a long-term mental illness. Just a comment...Speaking from experience, after 33 neurofeedback (NFB) sessions (with NO VERBAL THERAPY) I definately improved. Before the NFB my mind raced and I would ruminate and obsess for days on end...it was really torture. Seriously. After 33 treatments, my brain no longer operated like a skipping record...and that is a relief that I would definately pay THOUSANDS to get. However... NFB is no magic pill, no... and the false claims you spoke of in this article really give it a bad name, and that is sad to see. NFB worked better than most medications I tried, and it worked at a time when talk therapy only made me WORSE. NFB has no side effects, and most people do claim to get improved sleep and lowered anxiety from it... But cured? Nope, I wouldn't go into it thinking it is anywhere NEAR a cure! But then again, are medications? Is talk therapy? Different strokes for different folks.
 
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