Guest guest Posted August 2, 2012 Report Share Posted August 2, 2012 I am learner. What is NFB? thanksVickiOn Wed, Aug 1, 2012 at 2:06 PM, chiapetfarmer <chiapetfarmer@...> wrote: Dear Listmates, I'm looking for general means of approach with NFB training: If it is known that the larger the amplitude of a brainwave the more stable it is, and more often, problematic frequencies present larger amplitudes and are rife more often with higher variances, is a safe approach for doing NFB just to do squashes - I know it's summer (full, windowed, squish-I really don't care about all the many kinds, I have those general concepts down)? Is there ever a time you want larger amplitudes (I'm guessing alpha @ P4 and possibly SMR @ C4), but is this more of the exception in training. I mean in true meditative, mindfulness practice which NFB can lead to or based around, don't you generally just want to quiet the brain (like Ken Wilber can do)? But when would you want to increase amplitudes at the same time is also my question. Thanks for feedback-looks like both pun and in general is apropos here, Mike Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 2, 2012 Report Share Posted August 2, 2012 NeuroFeedBack-- Van Deusenpvdtlc@...http://www.brain-trainer.comUSA 678 224 5895 BR 47 3346 6235The Learning Curve, Inc. On Thu, Aug 2, 2012 at 11:53 AM, Vicki Dalia <20.vicki@...> wrote: I am learner. What is NFB? thanksVickiOn Wed, Aug 1, 2012 at 2:06 PM, chiapetfarmer <chiapetfarmer@...> wrote: Dear Listmates, I'm looking for general means of approach with NFB training: If it is known that the larger the amplitude of a brainwave the more stable it is, and more often, problematic frequencies present larger amplitudes and are rife more often with higher variances, is a safe approach for doing NFB just to do squashes - I know it's summer (full, windowed, squish-I really don't care about all the many kinds, I have those general concepts down)? Is there ever a time you want larger amplitudes (I'm guessing alpha @ P4 and possibly SMR @ C4), but is this more of the exception in training. I mean in true meditative, mindfulness practice which NFB can lead to or based around, don't you generally just want to quiet the brain (like Ken Wilber can do)? But when would you want to increase amplitudes at the same time is also my question. Thanks for feedback-looks like both pun and in general is apropos here, Mike Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 2, 2012 Report Share Posted August 2, 2012 okay Pete neurofeedback. Sorry to sound so stupid. On Thu, Aug 2, 2012 at 3:06 PM, pvdtlc <pvdtlc@...> wrote: NeuroFeedBack-- Van Deusenpvdtlc@...http://www.brain-trainer.com USA 678 224 5895 BR 47 3346 6235The Learning Curve, Inc. On Thu, Aug 2, 2012 at 11:53 AM, Vicki Dalia <20.vicki@...> wrote: I am learner. What is NFB? thanksVicki On Wed, Aug 1, 2012 at 2:06 PM, chiapetfarmer <chiapetfarmer@...> wrote: Dear Listmates, I'm looking for general means of approach with NFB training: If it is known that the larger the amplitude of a brainwave the more stable it is, and more often, problematic frequencies present larger amplitudes and are rife more often with higher variances, is a safe approach for doing NFB just to do squashes - I know it's summer (full, windowed, squish-I really don't care about all the many kinds, I have those general concepts down)? Is there ever a time you want larger amplitudes (I'm guessing alpha @ P4 and possibly SMR @ C4), but is this more of the exception in training. I mean in true meditative, mindfulness practice which NFB can lead to or based around, don't you generally just want to quiet the brain (like Ken Wilber can do)? But when would you want to increase amplitudes at the same time is also my question. Thanks for feedback-looks like both pun and in general is apropos here, Mike Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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