---------- BIOFEEDBACK AGENDA ----------
---------- SPRING, 2003 ----------
---------- A Syllabus ----------

View the projects produced by this semester's class

After reading all of the class projects, complete this assignment - deadline = May 15, 2003

After reading all of the class projects, evaluate your team and its work - deadline = May 15, 2003

                        BIOFEEDBACK:
                     Theory and Practice

Psychology 476                                      Spring, 2003
Dr. John M. Morgan                           MW   4:00 - 4:50 PM
                                        Harry Griffith Hall, 119
                                                  Laboratory TBA

REQUIRED TEXT: Biofeedback: A Practitioner's Guide, Second Edition
			   by Mark S. Schwartz and Associates
			   The Mayo Foundation  
			   The Guilford Press, New York, 1995
			   ISBN 0-89862-806-7


Jan. 22        General Introduction and 				Section I
               Review of EMG, EEG, EDG, TEMP modes of Biofeedback

Jan. 27        Continue the review of each mode of Biofeedback
               Form laboratory and project groups

Jan. 29        Continue the review & summary of dysfunctions
  - Feb. 3     Begin the demonstration of each piece of equipment	Section II
               individually to each group

Feb.	5        Outline procedures to be carried out during each 	Section III
               laboratory session 

Feb. 10        Instruction in progressive relaxation techniques		Section IV

Feb. 12        Instruction in autogenic relaxation techniques		Section IV
                         Begin laboratory work

Feb. 17 - 19   Biological basis of the nervous system 
               
Feb. 24 - 26   Central Nervous System & Autonomic Nervous System

Mar.  3 - 12   Disorders needing Lower Tension and Arousal  	   	Section V

Mar. 24 - 26   Nontraditional Applications				Section VI   

Apr.  2 -  9   Neurofeedback Applications  ADD/ADHD			Section VII

               Turn - in midterm project

Apr. 14 - 16   Neuromuscular Applications				Section VIII

Oct. 28        Elimination Disorders					Section IX

Apr. 21        Professional Issues and Ethics				Section X

Apr. 23 - 28   Other Applications					Section XII

Apr. 30        Peak Performance

May  5 - 7     Reports by laboratory groups each day
    

Final Exam Date   Turn - in final project 

                   MIDTERM & FINAL BIOFEEDBACK PROJECTS

          This is a new portion to my courses and stems from the
philosophy that the students should bear a reasonable share of the
work of a course.  The first half of the course is composed of
learning and exploring how the biofeedback works while getting the
laboratory experiences started and the second half is devoted to
finishing the laboratory experiences and to a discussion of how
biofeedback is used and applied to real life problems.
I.   Typical Dysfunctions:
     Chronic Fatigue
     Neurofeedback
     Rehabilitation
     Brain Brightening
     Stress Coping / Stress Management
     ADD / ADHD
     Peak Work Performance
     Insomnia / Sleep Disorders
     Stress - related Disorders
     Panic Attacks / Anxiety Attacks
     Alcohol Addiction / Other drug Addictions
     Immune Disorders
     Temporal Mandibular Joint Dysfunction
     Incontinence / Irritable Bowel Syndrome / bladder dysfunction
          / pelvic floor feedback
     Epilepsy
     Migraines & Tension Headaches
     Chronic Pain / Lower and Upper Back Pain
     Depression
     Well Aging
     Sports Performance Enhancement / Sports Fitness
     Increasing Memory / decreasing Normal Aging Memory Loss
     PMS / Sexual Dysfunction / Menopause
     Ergonomics
     Post-Traumatic-Stress- Disorder
     Fibromyalgia

II.  Modes of Biofeedback:
     Electromyogram
     Electroencephalogram
     Electrodermogram
     Temperature
     Other (Mirrors, etc)

III. Process of the project:
     Solo Each student selects a dysfunction condition to which
biofeedback has been applied (I.  above)
     Solo Each student selects the mode of the biofeedback
treatment with which to confront  the dysfunction (II. above)
     Team Members of the team negotiate with each other so that
each student is assigned a different  dysfunction on which to
concentrate (I. above)
     Solo Each student researches his/her topic and assimilates the
material, then writes a 4 page report in the format and style
agreed upon by the team.
     Team Members of the team meet often and produce a team report
that integrates each of the member's reports in a publishable
format and that maintains each student's  section separate and
signed.

IV.  Resources:
     Text book of the course
     Book section (stacks) of the library,  (Check the online
          catalog - Catalyst)
     Periodical section of the library -- Biofeedback & Self-
          Regulation, Psychophysiology
     Search of electronic indexes through the library, e.g.
          Medline, Psychlit, ERIC, etc.
     Internet newsgroups and lists (see attached list for examples)
     Search internet for specific topic home pages
     Physician, Patient and/or survivor home pages and/or
          newsgroups on internet
     
V.   Final Report will be published on the Internet as a product of
our class.  Only those reports that are of sufficient quality will
earn course credit and be published for all to read.  The reports
will be typed in either Wordperfect or Word word processing
computer programs with one inch margins all around and a NON-
proportional font such as New Courier with point size 12 and 10
characters per inch on average.  The individual student will write
his/her part individually but the team will be responsible to
insure that each part fits well with each other part.  Therefore,
the team needs to meet several times during the period in order to
insure that the individual reports mesh together in substance and
style.  Each section needs to use some of all of the resources
listed above and referenced on an additional page of the report for all
to reference.  The individual reports should be 4 single-spaced, full 
pages.  
     Each of these reports need to be highly compacted with knowledge and
data written in a very concise form.  There is no room for
sentences which do not materially advance the topic or that repeat
a previously state thought.  Personal, unsubstantiated opinions
have no place here.  This is not an "I think" piece or a
composition for an english class but a report on hard data that
extends the textbook treatment of the topic.

Please be sure to follow these guidelines:
1    Establish your specific topic with the other members of your
          team after repeated meetings.
2    Research and write your part of the team report in the word
          processor of your choice consulting periodically with
          your team members.
3    When completely finished with your part, examine it to
          follow these cautions:
     a    Use only one set of formatting codes and place them
               only at the beginning of your report.
     b    Use Courier or New Courier font only
     c    Use 12pt font size only - do not change this anywhere
               in the body of your report.
     d    Use single space vertical line spacing only.
     e    Use 1" margins at the top, bottom, left and a 1.5"
               margin at the right.  Otherwise, the lines may
               overrun the viewers screen.
     f    Do not use hyphens anywhere in the text.  They will not
               translate well.
     g    Do not use fancy formatting anywhere in the text, e.g.
               avoid hanging indents for the bibliography.
     h.   Avoid underlines, italics, etc. because they will not
               translate to the web.
4.   Save your work to floppy disc using only ASCII (DOS) TEXT
          file type, not ASCII delimited nor your word
          processor's proprietary file type.
5.   Get together with the rest of your team and join all of your
          team member's individual reports together as one
          sequential team report, eliminating any formatting
          codes in the body of the team report and placing them
          at the very beginning of the document only.

VI.  Evaluation:                                  Total Points
     Mandatory:
	  Midterm and Final				    200
          1 team laboratory report to the class             150
          2 projects:    Solo portion @  100 points each    200
                    Team portion @ 50 points each           100
          2 Take home exams over the team projects @ 30 ea   60
               (use on-line form)
          2 Team peer evaluation @ 20                        40
          attendance in class periods                        50
                                        ------------------------
          Total for the Semester                            800
     Voluntary extra credit:
          2 Occasions of volunteering to be a subject in a Psych
               dept experiment @ 20 ea                       40
          1 Extra credit term paper 1/3 or 2/3 or 1 letter grade
               increase variable

                      BIOFEEDBACK LABORATORY EXERCISE

     Laboratory hours are provided so that each member of the class
can experience Biofeedback / Stress-Reduction training both as the
subject/client and as the experimenter/trainer.  Students are
expected to choose one mode of Biofeedback on which to work during
laboratory sessions and choose one other classmate to form
laboratory groups.  Each member of a group will assume the role of
subject and also trainer.  There are eight weeks in which to finish
the laboratory exercise.  It is required that each group meet at
least three times per week and each member act as subject on each
occasion.  Each subject will require at least 30 minutes of
training per session.
     You should remember that this is your first attempt at
learning and teaching Biofeedback.  If your level of learning
excellence is not as perfect as you would wish, do not be
discouraged.  You are working under less that ideal circumstances.
     Each group will present an oral as well as written summary of
their laboratory experiences during one of the last four class
periods.  The group should present a literature summary on their
specific problem, present and interpret the data of each member of
the group, indicate any difficulties encountered and any changes
that they might employ if repeating the Biofeedback laboratory
exercise.  It is recommended that each member of each group prepare
a large graph of his/her data for the presentation to facilitate
class discussion.
     Attendance during class periods is required, as is usual, but
the final letter grades will be lowered of those students who miss
a classroom presentation of their classmates during the group
report sessions. 
     Grades will be calculated from the results of the Midterm and
Final Projects, the quality of the group laboratory experience as
indicated in part by the group's verbal report and attendance in
class.




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