Bipolar and Personality Disorders Neurofeedback Research

  • Baehr, E., Rosenfeld, J. P., Baehr, R., & Earnest, C. (1999). Clinical use of an alpha asymmetry neurofeedback protocol in the treatment of mood disorders. In Introduction to quantitative EEG and neurofeedback (pp. 181-201). Academic Press.

  • Coburn, K. L., Lauterbach, E. C., Boutros, N. N., Black, K. J., Arciniegas, D. B., & Coffey, C. E. (2006). The value of quantitative electroencephalography in clinical psychiatry: a report by the Committee on Research of the American Neuropsychiatric Association. The Journal of neuropsychiatry and clinical neurosciences, 18(4), 460-500.

  • Deckel, A. W., Hesselbrock, V., & Bauer, L. (1996). Antisocial personality disorder, childhood delinquency, and frontal brain functioning: EEG and neuropsychological findings. Journal of clinical psychology, 52(6), 639-650.

  • Fisher, S. F. (2007). Neurofeedback, affect regulation and attachment: A case study and analysis of antisocial personality. International Journal of Behavioral Consultation and Therapy, 3(1), 109.

  • Herpertz, S. C., Schneider, I., Schmahl, C., & Bertsch, K. (2018). Neurobiological mechanisms mediating emotion dysregulation as targets of change in borderline personality disorder. Psychopathology, 51(2), 96-104.

  • Ogiso, Y., Moriya, N., Ikuta, N., Maher‐Nishizono, A., Takase, M., Miyake, Y., & Minakawa, K. (1993). Relationship between clinical symptoms and EEG findings in borderline personality disorder. Psychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences, 47(1), 37-46.

  • Paret, C., Kluetsch, R., Zaehringer, J., Ruf, M., Demirakca, T., Bohus, M., ... & Schmahl, C. (2016). Alterations of amygdala-prefrontal connectivity with real-time fMRI neurofeedback in BPD patients. Social cognitive and affective neuroscience, 11(6), 952-960.

  • Putman, J. A., Othmer, S. F., Othmer, S., & Pollock, V. E. (2005). TOVA results following inter-hemispheric bipolar EEG training. Journal of Neurotherapy, 9(1), 37-52.

  • Schmahl, C., Niedtfeld, I., & Herpertz, S. C. (2018). Borderline personality: Alterations to brain structure and function through psychotherapy. Der Nervenarzt, 89(11), 1232-1236.

  • Schmidtke, J. I., & Heller, W. (2004). Personality, affect and EEG: predicting patterns of regional brain activity related to extraversion and neuroticism. Personality and individual differences, 36(3), 717-732.

  • Suppes, T., Leverich, G. S., Keck Jr, P. E., Nolen, W. A., Denicoff, K. D., Altshuler, L. L., ... & Post, R. M. (2001). The Stanley Foundation Bipolar Treatment Outcome Network: II. demographics and illness characteristics of the first 261 patients. Journal of affective disorders, 67(1-3), 45-59.

  • Surmeli, T., & Ertem, A. (2009). QEEG guided neurofeedback therapy in personality disorders: 13 case studies. Clinical EEG and Neuroscience, 40(1), 5-10.

  • Wagner, K. D. (2014). Age in school cohort, borderline personality disorder, and neurofeedback. The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry, 75(5), 643.

  • Yasin, S., Hussain, S. A., Aslan, S., Raza, I., Muzammel, M., & Othmani, A. (2021). EEG based Major Depressive disorder and Bipolar disorder detection using Neural Networks: A review. Computer Methods and Programs in Biomedicine, 202, 106007.

  • Zaehringer, J., Ende, G., Santangelo, P., Kleindienst, N., Ruf, M., Bertsch, K., ... & Paret, C. (2019). Improved emotion regulation after neurofeedback: A single-arm trial in patients with borderline personality disorder. NeuroImage: Clinical, 24, 102032.

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