Probing fMRI brain connectivity and activity changes during emotion regulation by EEG neurofeedback
Amin Dehghani, Hamid Soltanian-Zadeh, Gholam-Ali Hossein-Zadeh

TL;DR
This study used simultaneous EEG neurofeedback and fMRI to investigate brain activity and connectivity changes during emotion regulation, revealing significant neural and mood improvements specific to the neurofeedback intervention.
Contribution
It introduces a multimodal approach combining EEG and fMRI to quantify neural connectivity changes during emotion regulation via neurofeedback, highlighting specific brain region interactions.
Findings
Increased activity in prefrontal, occipital, parietal, and limbic regions.
Enhanced functional connectivity between prefrontal, parietal, limbic, and insula.
Significant mood improvements confirmed by psychometric assessments.
Abstract
Neurofeedback is a non-invasive brain training with long-term medical and non-medical applications. Despite the existence of several emotion regulation studies using neurofeedback, further investigation is needed to understand interactions of the brain regions involved in the process. We implemented EEG neurofeedback with simultaneous fMRI using a modified happiness-inducing task through autobiographical memories to upregulate positive emotion. The results showed increased activity of prefrontal, occipital, parietal, and limbic regions and increased functional connectivity between prefrontal, parietal, limbic system, and insula in the experimental group. New connectivity links were identified by comparing the functional connectivity of different experimental conditions within the experimental group and between the experimental and control groups. The proposed multimodal approach…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFunctional Brain Connectivity Studies · EEG and Brain-Computer Interfaces · Heart Rate Variability and Autonomic Control
