Task-related stress and EEG alpha biofeedback

Establishing a contingency between stress and a physiological response is essential in biofeedback. The sensitivity of high alpha to contingent stress was investigated by manipulating conditions known to influence stress, such as the distribution, predictability, and controllability of stressful stimuli, and number of tasks performed. Forty subjects were divided into stress and non-stress groups. Within each group, one-half had the dual-task of anticipating and increasing alpha activity. The other half was initially instructed to only anticipate alpha and, later, had the dual task of anticipating and controlling alpha. No feedback training was included to distribute the task-related stressor and allowed the assessment of self-control. All of the stress manipulations significantly influenced the effects of stress on alpha production. The dual-task subjects produced less alpha and less self-control than did training with control phased in after subjects learned to anticipate alpha. Without stress, phased-in control produced highly significant increases in alpha production and self-control without feedback. The use of an alpha-contingent feedback paradigm and anticipation training was related to the therapeutic applications of alpha feedback to stress and anxiety.

[1]  R. Ogilvie,et al.  Lucid, Prelucid, and nonlucid dreams related to the amount of EEG alpha activity during REM sleep. , 1984, Psychophysiology.

[2]  G. Schwartz,et al.  The effect of activation versus inhibition of feedback on perceived control of EEG activity , 1984, Biofeedback and self-regulation.

[3]  T. Mulholland,et al.  Effect of feedback contingencies on the control of occipital alpha , 1977, Biofeedback and self-regulation.

[4]  E. Poulton Composite model for human performance in continuous noise. , 1979, Psychological review.

[5]  Donald E. Broadbent,et al.  The current state of noise research: Reply to Poulton. , 1978 .

[6]  D. Meichenbaum,et al.  Cognitive factors in biofeedback therapy , 1976, Biofeedback and self-regulation.

[7]  K D KRYTER,et al.  The effects of noise on man. , 1959 .

[8]  S. Folkman,et al.  Stress, appraisal, and coping , 1974 .

[9]  J. Singer,et al.  Urban stress: experiments on noise and social stressors , 1972 .

[10]  R. Audette,et al.  A multivariate approach to the relationship between alpha waves and experience during feedback , 1979, Biofeedback and self-regulation.

[11]  S. Burchfield Stress : psychological and physiological interactions , 1985 .

[12]  J. Knott,et al.  Parameters of eyes-closed alpha enhancement. , 1974, Psychophysiology.

[13]  J. Weinberg,et al.  Psychobiology of Coping in Animals: The Effects of Predictability , 1980 .

[14]  Concepts of Control in Biofeedback , 1984 .

[15]  Richard S. Lazarus,et al.  Cognitive and Coping Processes in Emotion , 1974 .

[16]  D. Hord,et al.  Alpha control: Effectiveness of two kinds of feedback , 1971 .

[17]  K. M. Rice,et al.  Biofeedback as a placebo: anxiety reduction facilitated by training in either suppression or enhancement of alpha brainwaves. , 1981, Journal of consulting and clinical psychology.

[18]  Andrew Baum,et al.  Stress and the Environment , 1981 .

[19]  S. Cohen,et al.  Aftereffects of stress on human performance and social behavior: a review of research and theory. , 1980, Psychological bulletin.

[20]  P. Tyson,et al.  The choice of feedback stimulus can determine the success of alpha feedback training. , 1982, Psychophysiology.

[21]  The effects of changes in motivation on alpha enhancement. , 1975, Psychophysiology.

[22]  S. Folkman,et al.  Stress, Appraisal, and Coping. New York, NY: Springer; , 1984 .

[23]  W. B. Plotkin,et al.  The alpha experience revisited: biofeedback in the transformation of psychological state. , 1979, Psychological bulletin.

[24]  Cortical alpha rhythm, biofeedback, and the determinants of subjective state. , 1981 .

[25]  J. Kamiya,et al.  Anxiety change through electroencephalographic alpha feedback seen only in high anxiety subjects. , 1978, Science.

[26]  Operant conditioning and discrimination of alpha: some methodological limitations inherent in response-discrimination experiments. , 1981 .

[27]  E. Blanchard,et al.  Biofeedback, self-control, and self-management , 1977, Biofeedback and self-regulation.