Literature DB >> 3427123

Specific versus placebo effects in biofeedback training: a critical lay perspective.

J J Furedy1.   

Abstract

Recent interchanges on the question of how to evaluate biofeedback have been cast in terms of a researcher versus clinician dichotomy. This tends to make the arguments ad hominem and focuses attention on minutiae that are of limited general interest. Accordingly, one purpose of the present paper is to state the specific-effects approach to biofeedback evaluation from a critical lay, rather than a research, perspective. The logic of the specific-effects approach to treatment evaluation is first illustrated by a hypothetical example (the Minefield Parable), and it is then suggested that the approach is appropriate for the evaluation of any treatment, be it physical, psychological, or some complex combination. The other purpose of the paper is to further clarify the specific-effects position by responding to some difficulties that have been raised by critics of the position. Some of these difficulties are based on misrepresentations of the position, while others are genuine. However, even for the genuine difficulties, practical solutions are available. The paper concludes that the question of whether a particular class of treatments works is one that is properly raised by the intelligent consumer, and that, for the answer to that question, only the facts, based on adequately controlled clinical studies, will do.

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Year:  1987        PMID: 3427123     DOI: 10.1007/BF00999198

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biofeedback Self Regul        ISSN: 0363-3586


  2 in total

1.  Effects of instructions and contingency of reinforcement on the operant conditioning of human phasic heart rate change.

Authors:  D M Riley; J J Furedy
Journal:  Psychophysiology       Date:  1981-01       Impact factor: 4.016

2.  Biofeedback. Research, training, and clinical roles.

Authors:  A H Roberts
Journal:  Am Psychol       Date:  1985-08
  2 in total
  8 in total

1.  Tension headache: disregulation at some levels of stress.

Authors:  C A Hovanitz; M R Wander
Journal:  J Behav Med       Date:  1990-12

2.  An evaluation of the ability to voluntarily reduce the heart rate after a month of yoga practice.

Authors:  Shirley Telles; Meesha Joshi; Manoj Dash; P Raghuraj; K V Naveen; H R Nagendra
Journal:  Integr Physiol Behav Sci       Date:  2004 Apr-Jun

Review 3.  Alice-in-Wonderland terminological usage in, and communicational concerns about, that peculiarly American flight of technological fancy. The CQT polygraph.

Authors:  J J Furedy
Journal:  Integr Physiol Behav Sci       Date:  1991 Jul-Sep

4.  Comments on the Furedy/Shellenberger-Green debate.

Authors:  J G Carlson
Journal:  Biofeedback Self Regul       Date:  1987-09

5.  Can clinical biofeedback be scientifically validated? A follow-up on the Green-Shellenberger-Furedy-Roberts debates.

Authors:  J P Rosenfeld
Journal:  Biofeedback Self Regul       Date:  1987-09

6.  Specific effects and biofeedback versus biofeedback-assisted self-regulation training.

Authors:  R Shellenberger; J Green
Journal:  Biofeedback Self Regul       Date:  1987-09

7.  Specific versus placebo effects in biofeedback: some brief back-to-basics considerations.

Authors:  J J Furedy; D Shulhan
Journal:  Biofeedback Self Regul       Date:  1987-09

8.  An incremental model to isolate specific effects of behavioral treatments in essential hypertension.

Authors:  M Goebel; G W Viol; C Orebaugh
Journal:  Biofeedback Self Regul       Date:  1993-12
  8 in total

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