Research Context
Researchers examine neurofeedback in neuroscience and behavioral medicine studies.
Studies investigate neurofeedback for attention training and emotional regulation.

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Quick answer
Research explores neurofeedback as a tool for training brainwave self-regulation.
Researchers examine neurofeedback in neuroscience and behavioral medicine studies.
Research examines neurofeedback in cognitive training, ADHD management, and anxiety regulation.
Clinical outcomes vary depending on training protocols.
Written by
Gyfts Editorial Team
Editorial team at Gyfts researching holistic health modalities.
Reviewed by
Dr. Ava Gardner
Integrative Medicine Researcher
MB BCh BAO, MSc Integrative Medicine, MRCGP
Dr. Ava Gardner is a Dublin-based integrative medicine physician with over 15 years of clinical experience bridging conventional general practice and evidence-based complementary care. She holds a Masters in Integrative Medicine from the University of Arizona and has worked extensively in chronic pain management, women's hormonal health, and mind-body medicine. Dr. Gardner reviews health content for Gyfts to ensure clinical accuracy, balanced evidence presentation, and responsible safety guidance across modality and condition pages.
View full profile →These practitioners have chosen to be featured on Gyfts.

Sessions involve monitoring brainwave activity while participants interact with feedback systems.
11 May 2025

Neurofeedback trains individuals to recognize and regulate patterns of brain activity.
21 April 2025
Highly rated practitioners specialising in this modality.