On Wed, 19 Dec 2001, Michael LAVIN wrote:
>
> Doesn't the research of Miller and DiCara provide the basis
> for Biofeedback training?

I see that Mike Scoles just provided a good response to this
question while I was beavering away at it myself. But given that
I hate to waste a completed post and that there's a bit of
further opinion here, I send this along...

Yes and no. It certainly provided the impetus for the field.
But Miller and DiCara were concerned with one specific
theoretical issue: that any apparent operant conditioning of
autonomic responses was really due to associated operant
conditioning of skeletal muscle responses, which affected
autonomic responses (e.g.  heart-rate) indirectly. So their
experiments were carried out under curare, which paralyzed the
skeletal muscles. It was this work that proved to be
unreplicable.

I suppose that biofeedback practitioners don't really care
whether the route is direct or indirect, only that one can
thereby gain control over gut and brain responses. But it does
seem to me that the current revival of claims for the
effectiveness of biofeedback (for epilepsy and attention-deficit
disorder, for example) are based on hype rather than on evidence.
In particular, watch out for "neurofeedback" and its grandiose
and unsupported claims.

>From this discussion, I think what we need is an authoritative
review of the current state of this whole area, post Miller and
DiCara (which was a _long_ time ago). From my brief perusal of
current textbooks, its authors still aren't sure what to
conclude themselves.

-Stephen

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Stephen Black, Ph.D.                      tel: (819) 822-9600 ext 2470
Department of Psychology                  fax: (819) 822-9661
Bishop's University                    e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Lennoxville, QC
J1M 1Z7
Canada     Department web page at http://www.ubishops.ca/ccc/div/soc/psy
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