Skip to content

← Publications

2014 chapter original-research Neuroimage Clin

Optimizing real time fMRI neurofeedback for therapeutic discovery and development

Stoeckel LE, Garrison KA, Ghosh S, Wighton P, Hanlon CA, Gilman JM, Greer S, Turk-Browne NB, deBettencourt MT, Scheinost D, Craddock C, Thompson T, Calderon V, Bauer CC, George M, Breiter HC, Whitfield-Gabrieli S, Gabrieli JD, LaConte SM, Hirshberg L, Brewer JA, Hampson M, Van Der Kouwe A, Mackey S, Evins AE

Identifiers and access

DOI
10.1016/j.nicl.2014.07.002
PubMed
25161891
PMC
PMC4141981
Cited by
224

Key findings

This review outlines the state and clinical potential of real-time fMRI neurofeedback for driving plasticity in brain function, cognition, and behaviour, and proposes research strategies to develop rtfMRI into a personalised neurotherapeutic tool for brain disorders.

Abstract

Source: pubmed

While reducing the burden of brain disorders remains a top priority of organizations like the World Health Organization and National Institutes of Health, the development of novel, safe and effective treatments for brain disorders has been slow. In this paper, we describe the state of the science for an emerging technology, real time functional magnetic resonance imaging (rtfMRI) neurofeedback, in clinical neurotherapeutics. We review the scientific potential of rtfMRI and outline research strategies to optimize the development and application of rtfMRI neurofeedback as a next generation therapeutic tool. We propose that rtfMRI can be used to address a broad range of clinical problems by improving our understanding of brain-behavior relationships in order to develop more specific and effective interventions for individuals with brain disorders. We focus on the use of rtfMRI neurofeedback as a clinical neurotherapeutic tool to drive plasticity in brain function, cognition, and behavior. Our overall goal is for rtfMRI to advance personalized assessment and intervention approaches to enhance resilience and reduce morbidity by correcting maladaptive patterns of brain function in those with brain disorders.

Topics

  • brain-dynamics-naturalistic
  • mental-health-psychiatry

Lab authors

This record was curated from the lab's CV, NCBI MyBibliography, and OpenAlex. See PROJECTS.md for how to add or correct an entry via a pull request.