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Tech Update — The gadget requests are answered

Wednesday, – pre-setup at AAPB. Siegfried Othmer and I caught our flight yesterday from Los Angeles to the AAPB conference here in Jacksonville Florida. This after Siegfried just got back from Cleveland the day before. Today was the rough switch into east coast time for me, but it was worth the price, because what we […]

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Yoga of the Heart

“The heart is the recording secretary for the ego.” — Japanese Proverb Caroline Grierson and Sue and I have been listening to a tape by Ira Rosenberg of a short course on Heart Rate Variability (HRV) training delivered at one of the meetings of the California Biofeedback Society. Rosenberg has been doing this work since […]

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Frontal Training: Theory and Practice

Early work in neurofeedback was primarily on the central strip, and for me, central and temporal placements continue to be the starting placements for training. But frontal training has become an important and regular component of training over the past year or two. I now think of training on the central strip for normalization and […]

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“Artistes and Autistes”

“Not everything that can be counted counts, and not everything that counts can be counted.” Albert Einstein The debate continues on the various lists about the value of QEEG-based information to drive protocols. Whereas the fissures in the field are not as severe now as they once were, a divide still clearly exists, with people […]

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An example of the value of an activation database in remediation of memory problems in a 9 year old Learning Disabled Female

Author: Kirtley Thornton, Ph.D. A nine-year hold female with a history of a learning disability was self-referred to our clinic. She was evaluated under cognitive activation procedures with the Lexicor 24 channel unit. The activation tasks involved auditory memory, reading memory, eyes closed, auditory and visual attention and problem solving with the Raven’s matrices. The […]