Authors
Olaf Binsch, Ellen S Wilschut, Martijn Arns, Charelle Bottenheft, Pierre JL Valk, Eric HGJM Vermetten
Publication date
2018/3
Journal
Applied Psychophysiology and Biofeedback
Volume
43
Pages
37-47
Publisher
Springer US
Description
There is a growing interest in the application of psychophysiological signals in more applied settings. Unidirectional sensory motor rhythm-training (SMR) has demonstrated consistent effects on sleep. In this study the main aim was to analyze to what extent participants could gain voluntary control over sleep-related parameters and secondarily to assess possible influences of this training on sleep metrics. Bidirectional training of SMR as well as heart rate variability (HRV) was used to assess the feasibility of training these parameters as possible brain computer interfaces (BCI) signals, and assess effects normally associated with unidirectional SMR training such as the influence on objective and subjective sleep parameters. Participants (n = 26) received between 11 and 21 training sessions during 7 weeks in which they received feedback on their personalized threshold for either SMR or HRV activity, for …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
O Binsch, ES Wilschut, M Arns, C Bottenheft, PJL Valk… - Applied Psychophysiology and Biofeedback, 2018