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Is brainbehavior behavior

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In 1960s, certain rhythms could be 'trained' ... Dogs salivate to get food. Rats control heartrate to get water. History of Biofeedback ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Is brainbehavior behavior


1
Is brain-behavior behavior?
  • If so, it can be conditioned just like other
    behaviors
  • In 1960s, certain rhythms could be trained
  • Led to Neurotherapy and Brain-Computer interfaces
    (BCI)

2
When you become aware of your own brain activity
you can change it also.
3
Electrical stimulation of brains (ESB)
  • Electrical stimulation of brains of rats - James
    Olds in 1950s
  • Jacobsen and Torkildsen replicated work in
    humans
  • some epileptics stimulated themselves into
    convulsions

4
INTRA-CRANIAL SELF-STIMULATION
  • Rodent wireheads
  • 0.0005 amps whenever rat pushed lever
  • Up to 10,000 bar-presses an hour recorded
  • Animals self-stimulate gt 24 hrs continuously
    without rest, and cross electrified grid to gain
    access to lever
  • Reward center Medial forebrain bundle passing
    through lateral hypothalamus and ventral
    tegmentum
  • Other brain centers are aversive, such as
    periaqueductal grey matter (PAG)
  • Ventral tegmental area (VTA) neurons manufacture
    dopamine and they are under continuous inhibition
    by gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) system, an
    important component of the final common pathway"
    of reward, implicated in addiction, mood, and
    learning.

5
Delgado, Primate wireheads, and Circuitry man
6
Electrical stimulation of brains (intracranial
stimulation)
  • Pavlov conditioning experiments
  • Tone for food, buzzer for shock
  • Moved them closer together in time
  • confounded dog fell asleep
  • Termed internal inhibition
  • Animal can close down own systems to avoid stress
  • Neal E Miller trained autonomic functions
  • Dogs salivate to get food
  • Rats control heartrate to get water

7
History of Biofeedback
  • JH Bair, 1901, instrument used to teach ear
    wiggling
  • In early 20th century, J.H. Schultz in Germany
    developed a technique called Autogenic Training.
    Verbal instructions are used to guide a person to
    a more relaxed and controlled physiological
    state.
  • The method flourished, and the results were
    reported upon by Wolfgang Luthe in 1969 in the
    United States.
  • Increased awareness in Western world of yogic
    ability to alter physiology volitionally. E.g., a
    yogi could survive in a sealed box by voluntarily
    reducing his metabolic rate significantly,
    surviving hours with a limited supply of oxygen.
  • Peripheral biofeedback techniques include
  • GSR, thermal, breathing, cardiac

8
History of EEG biofeedback
  • 1934, Adrian watched his EEG in front of
    oscillograph and created alpha at will
  • Alpha biofeedback or deep states
  • Joe Kamiya at Univ of Chicago, 1958
  • Kamiya 1958
  • 1st subject - 60 tones and 60 guesses, half right
  • 2nd trial, 65 correct
  • 3rd 85 correct
  • 4th, after a few mistakes, 400 correct in a row
  • 1968 first congress in Aspen Colorado, called
    biofeedback
  • Alpha training adopted by flower culture of
    late 1960s, and practitioners oversold its claims

1978 Science paper
9
History of SMR biofeedback
  • In 1960s Mercury astronauts claimed they saw
    natives waving at them when the flew over the
    Pacific.(i.e., they hallucinated)
  • In 1967, Gordon Allies, inventor of amphetamine,
    was contracted to test toxicity of the Mercury
    capsule rocket fuel with David Fairchild
  • However Allies tested another chemical compound
    on himself and shortly died, before contract
    over. Fairchild asked Sterman to help finish
    work.
  • MB Sterman

10
Sterman was studying EEG-behavioral correlates in
cats
11
If EEG behavior is like any other behavior, it
could be shaped with operant conditioning
  • Two prominent rhythms in cat EEG SMR and PRS
  • Couldnt train PRS, but could train SMR
  • More on the PRS later

12
Cat Wireheads cortical electrodes, not brain
stem or hypothalamic
  • Cats often used in electrophysiology because head
    size the same regardless of breed, unlike dogs

13
10 cats trained to produce SMR (sensorimotor
activity over motor strip) for chicken broth
milk
14
Acquisition resembles normal behavior under O.C.
training
15
Classic abundance response at extinction
16
History of SMR biofeedback
  • Then Sterman and Fairchild went on to another
    study, testing rocket fuel on 50 cats, 10 from
    Stermans previous SMR training study.
  • Inject 100 mg/kg or so of fuel into each cat
  • After one hour, all usually go into grand mal
  • but not all - 7 delayed, 3 not at all.
  • seizure thresholds changed in these 10
  • Not explainable by placebo (i shall please in
    Latin) as cats didnt know what to expect, and
    experimenter blind because effect was entirely
    unexpected

17
Sterman et al (1967) showing usual toxic prodrome
and resistance to MMH-induced seizures in a
subgroup
Time
Avg 2 hours for seizures with EEG trained cats
vs. 1 hour for normal cats
NASA Rocket fuel
18
History of SMR biofeedback
  • Replicated findings in monkeys, then moved to
    humans at colleagues urging.
  • Human epileptics
  • First case study published in EEG Clin
    Neurophysiology
  • N4 study, 65 seizure reduction, in Epilepsia
    1976
  • Then n8, ABA three-year study, Epilepsia 1978
  • Finally, full blown study funded by NIH
  • Sham control, n24, three years
  • Double yoked n8, n8 NF, n8 log books
  • many went seizure free
  • controls after study received NF
  • Reliable increase in sleep spindle density and
    decreased awakenings

19
A major study showed 60 reduction in seizures 12
months after training
20
Turf war with medicine
  • In 1982 Stermans NIH grant for 3 y was funded,
    but then they demanded double blind after
    approving the initial design, then they pulled
    funding saying goals already reached
  • Cost of temporal lobe resection for epilepsy
    200,000
  • Money lost if patient undergoes neurotherapy
    successfully

21
Review of 19 studies with EEG Biofeedback for
EpilepsyMedical Journal, Jan 2000
  • 82 of studies demonstrated significant seizure
    reduction
  • Average reduction exceeded 50.
  • Studies reported reduction in seizure severity.
  • About 5 had complete control for up to one year
  • Sterman, MB (2000). Basic Concepts and
    Clinical Findings in the Treatment of Seizure
    Disorders with EEG Operant Conditioning.
    Clinical EEG, 31(1), 45-55.

22
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23
SMR attenuated (compared to cat subdural
recordings) but also present at the scalp in
humans
24
Mechanisms of SMR training
  • Enhancing GABA circuitry involved in motor
    regulation, dampening excitability to
    sensorimotor excitation

25
10-20 International System of Electrode Placement
26
History of Motoric Hyperexcitability
  • 1905 Hyperkinetic syndrome
  • (George Frederic Still, Lancet)
  • wanton destructiveness and a deficit in moral
    behavior
  • Now known to be due to slowed maturation
  • only partly related to will power, if at all
  • Lubar (1975) ABA study, n4
  • Cz theta/beta ratio

27
Patterns of behavior indicative of ADHD
  • Inattentive
  • Easily distracted
  • Fails to pay attention to details
  • makes careless mistakes
  • rarely follows directions completely or properly
  • Forgets things needed to complete tasks (e.g.,
    pencils)
  • Hyperactive
  • Unable to sit still
  • Leaves seat when sitting expected or instructed
  • Talks non-stop
  • Impulsive
  • Unable to suppress impulses
  • inappropriate comments or shouts out answers
    early
  • Hits
  • Often puts oneself in danger, such as dashes into
    street

28
Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder
  • ADHD affects 2 million children in USA
  • 5 of all boys
  • 2 of all girls
  • 60 will remain symptomatic as adults
  • 1 M children take Rx to control hyperactivity.
  • Genetic component MZ concordance is 75-91
  • EEG frontal slowing due to immature frontal lobe
    in impulsive subtype

29
Ritalin
  • Controversy
  • Commonly prescribed drug for children
  • Worries about long-term effects.
  • No studies on children who have taken Ritalin gt
    14 months.
  • Very similar to cocaine in composition and effect

30
Monastra study ADHD and biofeedback vs.
stimulant therapy
  • 100 ADHD children, ages 6-19, inattentive or
    combined types
  • 1-year multimodal outpatient program
  • included Ritalin, parent counseling, academic
    support
  • 51 with EEG biofeedback
  • RESULTS
  • Post Tx assessments with and without stimulant
    therapy.
  • Ritalin produced significant improvement on TOVA
    and ADDES
  • Did not sustain when Ritalin removed
  • EEG biofeedback group sustained gains when
    Ritalin removed.

31
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32
First Year of specific Neurofeedback Application
  • 1967 SMR conditioning in general
  • 1973 Epilepsy
  • 1975 Peak Performance
  • 1976 ADHD
  • 1977 Addiction
  • 1978 Anxiety disorders
  • 1978 Learning disabilities
  • 1980 Sleep Disorders
  • 1995 Brain Injury
  • 1995 Lyme's Disease
  • 1996 CFS
  • 1997 Mood disorders

33
Neurotherapy -start
  • Revives Hess CNS model of 1950s
  • overaroused
  • underaroused
  • Added by Othmers
  • instability
  • Related issue of plasticity
  • Cajal thought adult brain fixed
  • finally countered by Peter Eriksson 1998

34
Most important figure in behavioral neuroscience
(i.e., psychology)
35
Elegant design to counter any intrinsic
(non-contextual) reward
36
Earned PRS
37
PRS and learning
38
PRS characteristics
  • Reward-based inhibition of MRF
  • Mesencephalic Reticular Formation (originally
    called ARF) turns off the DC, i.e., volitional
    aspect of mind
  • PRS does not occur initially
  • animal must be fully habituated to environment
  • any novelty or change will disrupt it.
  • Light must also be on for PRS to emerge, even
    when light off is a signal of food delivery
    trials.
  • 3-5 s burst indistinguishable from sleep onset or
    SWS
  • Signal transmission in thalamus (LGN) and cortex
    is suppressed by PRS (similar to SWS)

39
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40
Unresponsive during PRS, like sleep
41
PRS (6-9 Hz in cats, 8-13 Hz in humans)
42
Alpha burst reflect preparation
43
Impact human learning
44
Field of Neuroregulation
  • Clinical aspects
  • Thalamocortical dysrhythmias
  • Cognition
  • Time binding
  • Information processing, recruitment
  • ERD and ERS

45
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46
NF PracticeTherapist and client/game screen
Therapist Monitor
EEG Sensors
Feedback Screen
47
Game provides client feedback
Mazes
48
Space Race
So how do you do it?
49
The Therapist Screen
Raw
Inhibit
Reward
Inhibit
50
Scoring Charts Provide Periodic Feedback
Operant Conditioning
51
A normal looking EEG is small in height
Small EEG
52
Reducing excessive (tall) slow brain waves helps
the brain function better
Examples of excessive slow brainwaves
53
Example of EEG Brain Map
Courtesy of Q-Metrx
54
This man has way too much alpha with his eyes
open. Hes got problems with obsessive thinking
getting stuck
Slow alpha increased with eyes open. Thats not
normal.
55
PRE/POST ASSESSMENTSMale, age 9. Drawing before
Neurofeedback training
56
Male, age 9. Drawing after 4 months of
Neurofeedback training, 5/2/95
57
Childs Family Drawing at Beginning of NF - 8/3/94
58
Drawing after Twenty Sessions - 9/8/94
59
Drawing after forty sessions -11/25/94
60
Neurofeedback Outcome 2003 Courtesy of Moshe
Perl, Ph.D.
61
One year follow-up
Courtesy of Moshe Perl, Ph.D.
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