Bibliography of Scientific Articles
Links to Topics:
Click on the links below for more information on topic.
- Academic Cognitive Enhancement
- Addiction
- AD/HD and Learning Disabilities
- Adverse Reactions and Side Effects
- Anxiety, PTSD, and Sleep
- Asthma
- Autism and Asperger’s
- Brain Injury, Stroke, Coma, Spacticity, and Cerebral Palsy
- Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, Fibromyalgia, and Autoimmune Dysfunction
- Creativity and Cognitive Decline
- Criminals & Juvenile Offenders
- Depression, Withdrawl, Asymemetry, Anger, and Premenstrual Syndrome
- Dissociative Disorders
- Epilepsy
- Functional MRI (fMRI) Neurofeedback
- Hemoencephalography
- Hypertension
- LENS Neurofeedback
- LORETA Neurofeedback
- Medical Conditions
- Obsessive Compulsive Disorder
- Optimal Functioning and Peak Performance
- Pain and Headache
- Parkinson’s Syndrome
- Review Articles
- rTMS
- Schizophrenia
- Sleep
- Slow Cortical Potentials
- Standards
- Theoretical Treatices
- Tinnitus
- Tourette’s Syndrome
- Z-Score Neurofeedback Training
Comprehensive Bibliography in .pdf format
Disclaimer
All articles, documents and publications mentioned by or linked by this site or hosted at this site have been provided by The International Society for Neurofeedback and Research (ISNR) as a public service. There is absolutely no endorsement by ISNR of any statement made in any of these documents, articles, or publications. Expect to see differences of opinion between authors. That is the essence of free and open scientific study.
Comprehensive Neurofeedback Bibliography
Compiled by D. Corydon Hammond, PhD Professor, Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation, University of Utah School of Medicine and D. Allen Novian, PhD, LMFT, LPC-S, Novian Counseling & Consulting INC. Frank H. Duffy, M.D., Professor and Pediatric Neurologist at Harvard Medical School, stated in an editorial in the January, 2000 issue of the journal Clinical Electroencephalography that the scholarly literature suggests that neurofeedback should play a major therapeutic role in many difficult areas. “In my opinion, if any medication had demonstrated such a wide spectrum of efficacy it would be universally accepted and widely used” (p. v). “It is a field to be taken seriously by all” (p. vii). A Guideline for Objectively Evaluating the Efficacy of Neurofeedback Treatments: La Vaque, T. J., Hammond, D. C., Trudeau, D., Monastra, V., Perry, J., Lehrer, P., Matheson, D., & Sherman, R. (2002). Template for developing guidelines for the evaluation of the clinical efficacy of psychophysiological interventions. Applied Psychophysiology & Biofeedback, 27(4), 273-281.