2018
DOI: 10.1101/342220
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The effects of psychiatric history and age on self-regulation of the default mode network

Abstract: Real-time neurofeedback enables human subjects to learn to regulate their brain activity, effecting behavioral changes and improvements of psychiatric symptomatology. Neurofeedback up-regulation and downregulation have been assumed to share common neural correlates. Neuropsychiatric pathology and aging incur suboptimal functioning of the default mode network. Despite the exponential increase in real-time neuroimaging studies, the effects of aging, pathology and the direction of regulation on neurofeedback perf… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…Small sample sizes are one of the primary reasons for underpowered studies ( Algermissen and Mehler, 2018 ) and yet only three studies ( Jaeckle et al, 2019 , Mehler et al, 2018 , Skouras and Scharnowski, 2019 ) justified their sample size with power calculation (see Table 2 ). Although two studies ( Papoutsi et al, 2018a , Subramanian et al, 2016 ) estimated the number of participants for future studies based on their early-phase results, this procedure can be problematic because it can lead to exaggerated estimates of effect sizes and thus underpowered efficacy studies.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 3 more Smart Citations
“…Small sample sizes are one of the primary reasons for underpowered studies ( Algermissen and Mehler, 2018 ) and yet only three studies ( Jaeckle et al, 2019 , Mehler et al, 2018 , Skouras and Scharnowski, 2019 ) justified their sample size with power calculation (see Table 2 ). Although two studies ( Papoutsi et al, 2018a , Subramanian et al, 2016 ) estimated the number of participants for future studies based on their early-phase results, this procedure can be problematic because it can lead to exaggerated estimates of effect sizes and thus underpowered efficacy studies.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In publications with multiple control groups, an average control group size was calculated first. The two studies using a large dataset from a repository ( McDonald et al, 2017 , Skouras and Scharnowski, 2019 ) were excluded from the count as outliers. Finally, if no control group was included in the study, the study was omitted from the control group count in order to provide a realistic average control group size.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Others used much wider age ranges of participants ( Hanlon et al, 2013 , Li et al, 2013 ), with some studies including participants ages 18–50 years old ( Hamilton et al, 2011 ) and 18 to 60 years old ( Canterberry et al, 2013 , Hartwell et al, 2016 , Karch et al, 2015 ). Other work beyond the focus of our review has indeed identified age differences in neurofeedback performance, such as a negative correlation between age and default mode network neurofeedback performance in a non-pathological sample of adults aged 20–45 years old ( Skouras & Scharnowski, 2019 ).…”
Section: Future Directions For Real-time Fmri Neurofeedback Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%