Over 300 million people suffer from depression globally according to the World Health Organization. This common mental disorder impacts almost every aspect of a person’s life, reducing their ability to function while inducing fatigue and a feeling of worthlessness.
Everyone experiences some form of anxiety at some point in their life. Evolutionarily, it is a necessary and adaptive feature for survival. A certain level of anxiety can help raise our arousal levels so that we are able to appropriately respond in high stress situations. However, when anxiety symptoms become so overwhelming that they interfere with our daily functioning, an anxiety disorder may be the source.
Evidence-based information on the clinical use of neurofeedback for ADHD
In-School Neurofeedback Training for ADHD: Sustained Improvements From a Randomized Control Trial
Improving visual perception through neurofeedback
Individual alpha neurofeedback training effect on short term memory
Neurotherapy of traumatic brain injury/posttraumatic stress symptoms in OEF/OIF veterans
ARCHIVED ARTICLES
Stephen Porges: The Polyvagal Theory & The Vagal Nerve – #264
Joanne McIntyre, OTR, MS (Psych), BCN on the Safe and Sound Protocol (SSP)
Clapping in Time Parallels Literacy & Calls Upon Overlapping Neuro Mechanisms in Early Readers
Vagus Nerve as Modulator of the Brain–Gut Axis in Psychiatric and Inflammatory Disorders
At a Glance: Classroom Accommodations for Auditory Processing Disorder
How to repair the brain-gut axis? It all starts with the Vagus!
Neuroplasticity: The 10 Fundamentals Of Rewiring Your Brain
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