Decoded fMRI neurofeedback can induce bidirectional behavioral changes within single participants
Aurelio Cortese, Kaoru Amano, Ai Koizumi, Hakwan Lau, Mitsuo Kawato

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that decoded fMRI neurofeedback can induce bidirectional behavioral changes within individuals, with effects influenced by session order and showing potential for clinical and training applications.
Contribution
It provides evidence that DecNef can produce reversible behavioral modifications and models the dynamics of learning and interference across sessions.
Findings
DecNef induces bidirectional behavioral changes.
Up-regulation effects are more pronounced and longer-lasting.
Learning interference reduces second-week effects.
Abstract
Studies using real-time functional magnetic resonance imaging (rt-fMRI) have recently incorporated the decoding approach, allowing for fMRI to be used as a tool for manipulation of fine-grained neural activity. Because of the tremendous potential for clinical applications, certain questions regarding decoded neurofeedback (DecNef) must be addressed. Neurofeedback effects can last for months, but the short- to mid-term dynamics are not known. Specifically, can the same subjects learn to induce neural patterns in two opposite directions in different sessions? This leads to a further question, whether learning to reverse a neural pattern may be less effective after training to induce it in a previous session. Here we employed a within-subjects' design, with subjects undergoing DecNef training sequentially in opposite directions (up or down regulation of confidence judgements in a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFunctional Brain Connectivity Studies · EEG and Brain-Computer Interfaces · Neural dynamics and brain function
