Impact of EEG biofeedback on event-related potentials (ERPs) in attention-deficit hyperactivity (ADHD) children
Sophio Bakhtadze, Marine Janelidze, Nana Khachapuridze

TL;DR
This study investigates how EEG biofeedback therapy influences event-related potentials, particularly P300, in children with ADHD, showing improvements in later response components after treatment.
Contribution
It provides evidence that neurofeedback therapy can modify ERP parameters related to decision-making in children with ADHD, an area previously unexplored.
Findings
Significant improvement in P300 parameters after neurofeedback.
No effect observed on earlier ERP components.
Neurofeedback influences decision-making processes in ADHD children.
Abstract
Impact of EEG biofeedback on event-related potentials (ERPs) in attention-deficit hyperactivity (ADHD) children. Introduction: ADHD is one of the most widely spread condition of school aged children affecting 5% of children of this age.The core clinical signs of ADHD are inattention, restlessness and impulsivity. According to various authors direct measures of attention are of two types: 1. Recording the alpha rhythm on the EEG and event-related potentials (ERP); 2. Tests of reaction time, continuous performance tests, paired associated learning, and tests of memorization; The second one is evidence-based. As for the first one it is known that ERPs especially of those with later response reflect the process of mental effortfullness to select the appropriate behavior and accomplish decision making during the action of target stimulus. Thus selection of action as well as decision making…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAttention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder · EEG and Brain-Computer Interfaces · Children's Physical and Motor Development
