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Related Experiment Videos

Biofeedback, self-control, and self-management

L H Epstein, E B Blanchard

    Biofeedback and Self-Regulation
    |June 1, 1977
    PubMed
    Summary
    This summary is machine-generated.

    This study explores self-control strategies for physiological responses, drawing parallels with motoric and cognitive self-management. It defines self-control within a broader self-management framework, incorporating discrimination and maintenance.

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    Area of Science:

    • Psychophysiology
    • Behavioral Science
    • Cognitive Psychology

    Background:

    • Biofeedback aims to achieve self-control of physiological responses.
    • Existing literature on self-control primarily focuses on motoric and cognitive functions.
    • A gap exists in understanding the application of self-control principles to physiological regulation.

    Purpose of the Study:

    • To survey existing conceptions and paradigms of self-control in motoric and cognitive domains.
    • To establish a theoretical basis for the self-control of physiological responses.
    • To define self-control operationally within a self-management framework.

    Main Methods:

    • Literature review of self-control concepts in motoric and cognitive responses.
    • Conceptual analysis and synthesis of existing paradigms.

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  • Development of an operational definition of self-control.
  • Main Results:

    • Identified commonalities and differences in self-control strategies across response types.
    • Proposed an operational definition of self-control.
    • Integrated self-control into a general self-management strategy.

    Conclusions:

    • Self-control principles from motoric and cognitive domains can inform physiological self-regulation.
    • A comprehensive self-management strategy includes discrimination and maintenance components for effective self-control.
    • Further research can build upon this framework for biofeedback applications.