PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Training your brain using neurofeedback

A new brain-imaging technique for a true brain workout

2014-01-21
(Press-News.org) Contact information: Anita Kar
anita.kar@mcgill.ca
514-398-3376
McGill University
Training your brain using neurofeedback A new brain-imaging technique for a true brain workout

A new brain-imaging technique enables people to 'watch' their own brain activity in real time and to control or adjust function in pre-determined brain regions. The study from the Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital – The Neuro, McGill University and the McGill University Health Centre, published in NeuroImage, is the first to demonstrate that magnetoencephalography (MEG) can be used as a potential therapeutic tool to control and train specific targeted brain regions. This advanced brain-imaging technology has important clinical applications for numerous neurological and neuropsychiatric conditions.

MEG is a non-invasive imaging technology that measures magnetic fields generated by nerve cell circuits in the brain. MEG captures these tiny magnetic fields with remarkable accuracy and has unrivaled time resolution - a millisecond time scale across the entire brain. "This means you can observe your own brain activity as it happens," says Dr. Sylvain Baillet, acting Director of the Brain Imaging Centre at The Neuro and lead investigator on the study. "We can use MEG for neurofeedback – a process by which people can see on-going physiological information that they aren't usually aware of, in this case, their own brain activity, and use that information to train themselves to self-regulate. Our ultimate hope and aim is to enable patients to train specific regions of their own brain, in a way that relates to their particular condition. For example neurofeedback can be used by people with epilepsy so that they could train to modify brain activity in order to avoid a seizure."

In this proof of concept study, participants had nine sessions in the MEG and used neurofeedback to reach a specific target. The target was to look at a coloured disc on a display screen and find their own strategy to change the disc's colour from dark red to bright yellow white, and to maintain that bright colour for as long as possible. The disc colour was indexed on a very specific aspect of their ongoing brain activity: the researchers had set it up so that the experiment was accessing predefined regions of the motor cortex in the participants' brain. The colour presented was changing according to a predefined combination of slow and faster brain activity within these regions. This was possible because the researchers combined MEG with MRI, which provides information on the brain's structures, known as magnetic source imaging (MSI).

"The remarkable thing is that with each training session, the participants were able to reach the target aim faster, even though we were raising the bar for the target objective in each session, the way you raise the bar each time in a high jump competition. These results showed that participants were successfully using neurofeedback to alter their pattern of brain activity according to a predefined objective in specific regions of their brain's motor cortex, without moving any body part. This demonstrates that MEG source imaging can provide brain region-specific real time neurofeedback and that longitudinal neurofeedback training is possible with this technique."

These findings pave the way for MEG as an innovative therapeutic approach for treating patients. To date, work with epilepsy patients has shown the most promise but there is great potential to use MEG to investigate other neurological syndromes and neuropsychiatric disorders (e.g., stroke, dementia, movement disorders, chronic depression, etc). MEG has potential to reveal dynamics of brain activity involved in perception, cognition and behaviour: it has provided unique insight on brain functions (language, motor control, visual and auditory perception, etc.) and dysfunctions (movement disorders, tinnitus, chronic pain, dementia, etc.).

Dr. Baillet and his team are collaborating presently with Prof. Isabelle Peretz at Université de Montréal to use this technique with people that have amusia, a disorder that makes them unable to process musical pitch. It is hypothesized that amusia results from poor connectivity between the auditory cortex and prefrontal regions in the brain. In an ongoing study, the team is measuring the intensity of functional connectivity between these brain regions in amusic patients and aged-matched healthy controls. Using MEG-neurofeedback, they hope to take advantage of the brain's plasticity to reinforce the functional connectivity between the target brain regions. If the approach demonstrates an improvement in pitch discrimination in participants, that will demonstrate the clinical and rehabilitative applications of this approach. The baseline measurements have been taken already, and the training sessions will take place over this year.



INFORMATION:

This work was funded by The Neuro's National Bank Fellowship, the Killam Trusts, the Fonds de Recherche du Québec – Sante, the Natural Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada, the National Institutes of Health, Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (Germany), the Agence Nationale pour la Recherche (France), and a seed grant from the Center for Research on Brain, Language and Music (Canada).

The Neuro

The Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital — The Neuro, is a unique academic medical centre dedicated to neuroscience. Founded in 1934 by the renowned Dr. Wilder Penfield, The Neuro is recognized internationally for integrating research, compassionate patient care and advanced training, all key to advances in science and medicine. The Neuro is a research and teaching institute of McGill University and forms the basis for the Neuroscience Mission of the McGill University Health Centre. Neuro researchers are world leaders in cellular and molecular neuroscience, brain imaging, cognitive neuroscience and the study and treatment of epilepsy, multiple sclerosis and neuromuscular disorders. For more information, visit theneuro.com.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

New study finds mistimed sleep disrupts rhythms of genes in humans

2014-01-21
New study finds mistimed sleep disrupts rhythms of genes in humans A new study from the University of Surrey, published today in the journal PNAS (Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences), found that the daily rhythms of our genes are disrupted when sleep times shift. Researchers ...

Hospital water taps contaminated with bacteria

2014-01-21
Hospital water taps contaminated with bacteria Additional research needed to uncover how water contamination threatens patient safety New research finds significantly higher levels of infectious pathogens in water from faucet taps with aerators ...

Frog fathers don't mind dropping off their tadpoles in cannibal-infested pools

2014-01-21
Frog fathers don't mind dropping off their tadpoles in cannibal-infested pools Male dyeing poison frogs make seemingly strange parental decisions in depositing tadpoles in not-so-safe havens Given a choice, male dyeing poison frogs snub empty pools in favor of ones ...

Novel nanotherapy breakthrough may help reduce recurrent heart attacks and stroke

2014-01-21
Novel nanotherapy breakthrough may help reduce recurrent heart attacks and stroke Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai designs HDL nanoparticle to deliver statin medication inside inflamed blood vessels to prevent repeat ...

Different sponge species have highly specific, stable microbiomes, MBL team reports

2014-01-21
Different sponge species have highly specific, stable microbiomes, MBL team reports WOODS HOLE, Mass. —The sea sponge is about as simple as an animal can get, but its associated bacterial community—its microbiome —is known to approach the complexity of the diverse ...

British Muslims with diabetes need more healthcare support during Ramadan

2014-01-21
British Muslims with diabetes need more healthcare support during Ramadan British Muslims with diabetes may avoid attending GP surgeries to discuss fasting during the holy month of Ramadan with potentially serious consequences for their future health, ...

Cocaine users enjoy social interactions less

2014-01-21
Cocaine users enjoy social interactions less In Europe as well as worldwide, cocaine is the second most frequently used drug after cannabis. Chronic cocaine users display worse memory performance, concentration difficulties, and attentional deficits but also ...

Depression higher than previously reported in people with severe rheumatoid arthritis

2014-01-21
Depression higher than previously reported in people with severe rheumatoid arthritis Levels of depression and anxiety in people with severe rheumatoid arthritis are higher than previously reported, according to new research Levels of depression ...

Researchers discover an epigenetic lesion in the hippocampus of Alzheimer's

2014-01-21
Researchers discover an epigenetic lesion in the hippocampus of Alzheimer's Alzheimer's disease can reach epidemic range in the coming decades, by the increasing average age of society. There are two key issues for Alzheimer's disease: ...

Large-scale HPV self-testing proves effective for screening cervical cancer

2014-01-21
Large-scale HPV self-testing proves effective for screening cervical cancer Self-testing for Human Papillomavirus (HPV) – the virus that causes cervical cancer – is as effective at detecting cancer as a conventional smear test (cytology screening) ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Scientists define the ingredients for finding natural clean hydrogen

New study sheds light on health differences between sexes

Scientists film the heart forming in 3D earlier than ever before

Astrophysicists explore our galaxy’s magnetic turbulence in unprecedented detail using a new computer model

Scientists precisely simulate turbulence in the Galaxy — it doesn’t behave like they thought

DiffInvex reveals how cancers rewire driver genes to beat chemotherapy

Combinations of chronic illnesses could double risk of depression

Growth before photosynthesis: how trees regulate their water balance

Stress hormone pathways in primate brains reveal key insights for human mental health research

Enlarged salience network could be first reliable biomarker for depression risk

Higher success rate using a simple oral swab test before IVF

New survey shows privacy and safety tops list of parental concerns about screen time

Enhanced activity in the upper atmosphere of Sporadic E layers during the 2024 Mother’s Day super geomagnetic storm

Accelerating bacterial evolution in the laboratory

Summer in the city

Echidna microbiome changes while mums nurse puggle

No increased risk of gynecological cancer with testosterone use after five years

Growth in informal lead mining is contributing to widespread poisoning

Unprecedented progress in tackling smoking during pregnancy threatened by NHS cuts, experts warn

Top scientific research recognized at ACC Asia Conference

GLP-1 drugs are helpful for children who are living with severe obesity, data from Swedish clinic indicates

Popular weight-loss drugs following bariatric surgery may offer additional cardiovascular benefits

Patients of an online obesity clinic achieved the same weight loss as those in clinical trials of semaglutide – but with much lower doses of the drug

Protein bars enriched with collagen have potential as a weight-loss aid, Spanish study finds

Semaglutide may provide early protection against heart disease in high-risk patients—even before clinically meaningful weight loss and prior to the full target dose

Civil defense units must invest in professionalization and own resources to face climate risks

Flamingos create water tornados to trap their prey

FFAR taps Danforth Center plant scientists for crop research to preserve soil and water health

Research spotlight: ‘Cell line atlas’ provides a crucial resource for developing therapies for biliary tract cancer

Despite higher sensitivity, multitarget stool DNA tests not as cost-effective for early detection of CRC compared with FIT

[Press-News.org] Training your brain using neurofeedback
A new brain-imaging technique for a true brain workout