THE EFFECTS OF EEG BIOFEEDBACK TRAINING ON THE BEHAVIOR OF HYPERACTIVE CHILDREN.

Satterfield (1974) and other, i.e. Lubar and Shouse (1978) have suggested a relationship between arousal level and hyperactivity such that low cortical arousal was related to lowered inhibitory control on the part of the hyperactive child. The present study was designed to test this theory using EEG...

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Main Author: PARZIALE, JEFFREY LYNN.
Language:en
Published: The University of Arizona. 1982
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/187770
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spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-1877702015-10-23T04:35:02Z THE EFFECTS OF EEG BIOFEEDBACK TRAINING ON THE BEHAVIOR OF HYPERACTIVE CHILDREN. PARZIALE, JEFFREY LYNN. Satterfield (1974) and other, i.e. Lubar and Shouse (1978) have suggested a relationship between arousal level and hyperactivity such that low cortical arousal was related to lowered inhibitory control on the part of the hyperactive child. The present study was designed to test this theory using EEG activity as a measure of arousal and certain psychological tests and rating scales as dependent measures. Also, to investigate the utility of this procedure in a small clinic setting. The sample consisted of 16 hyperactive males between the ages of 6-12. These children were placed into either the placebo or experimental group. A controlled group outcome design was utilized in this study. Data consisted of four biofeedback measures and four test measures. Following a pre-test battery and baseline session, children received seven weeks of training. Finally, a post-test battery and baseline session concluded the study. The results were summarized and placed on graphs and table. Biofeedback data displaced measurable change in the predicted direction, as did rating scale data. Three other test measures displayed positive, but non-significant changes. Implications for the study were noted. Recommendations for practitioners and future research centered on the concepts of generalization, parental involvement and practice. 1982 text Dissertation-Reproduction (electronic) http://hdl.handle.net/10150/187770 8217451 en Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. The University of Arizona.
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
description Satterfield (1974) and other, i.e. Lubar and Shouse (1978) have suggested a relationship between arousal level and hyperactivity such that low cortical arousal was related to lowered inhibitory control on the part of the hyperactive child. The present study was designed to test this theory using EEG activity as a measure of arousal and certain psychological tests and rating scales as dependent measures. Also, to investigate the utility of this procedure in a small clinic setting. The sample consisted of 16 hyperactive males between the ages of 6-12. These children were placed into either the placebo or experimental group. A controlled group outcome design was utilized in this study. Data consisted of four biofeedback measures and four test measures. Following a pre-test battery and baseline session, children received seven weeks of training. Finally, a post-test battery and baseline session concluded the study. The results were summarized and placed on graphs and table. Biofeedback data displaced measurable change in the predicted direction, as did rating scale data. Three other test measures displayed positive, but non-significant changes. Implications for the study were noted. Recommendations for practitioners and future research centered on the concepts of generalization, parental involvement and practice.
author PARZIALE, JEFFREY LYNN.
spellingShingle PARZIALE, JEFFREY LYNN.
THE EFFECTS OF EEG BIOFEEDBACK TRAINING ON THE BEHAVIOR OF HYPERACTIVE CHILDREN.
author_facet PARZIALE, JEFFREY LYNN.
author_sort PARZIALE, JEFFREY LYNN.
title THE EFFECTS OF EEG BIOFEEDBACK TRAINING ON THE BEHAVIOR OF HYPERACTIVE CHILDREN.
title_short THE EFFECTS OF EEG BIOFEEDBACK TRAINING ON THE BEHAVIOR OF HYPERACTIVE CHILDREN.
title_full THE EFFECTS OF EEG BIOFEEDBACK TRAINING ON THE BEHAVIOR OF HYPERACTIVE CHILDREN.
title_fullStr THE EFFECTS OF EEG BIOFEEDBACK TRAINING ON THE BEHAVIOR OF HYPERACTIVE CHILDREN.
title_full_unstemmed THE EFFECTS OF EEG BIOFEEDBACK TRAINING ON THE BEHAVIOR OF HYPERACTIVE CHILDREN.
title_sort effects of eeg biofeedback training on the behavior of hyperactive children.
publisher The University of Arizona.
publishDate 1982
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/187770
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