Schwartz G E
Biofeedback Self Regul. 1976 Mar;1(1):7-30. doi: 10.1007/BF00998688.
This paper develops the basic premise that learning to self-regulate a pattern of responses can have different consequences from those observed when controlling individual functions alone. It is suggested that the self-regulation of patterns of responses can be a particularly sensitive and effective procedure for (a) uncovering biological linkages and constraints between responses in the intact human, (b) investigating how multiphysiological systems combine to produce unique subjective experiences and effects on performance, and (c) enhancing the clinical effectiveness of biofeedback procedures by training patients to integrate and coordinate voluntarily specific patterns of cognitive, autonomic, and motor responses. These hypotheses are illustrated by basic research involving biofeedback training for patterns of blood pressure, heart rate and EEG activity, related experiments on the cognitive self-regulation of patterns of physiological responses using affective imagery and meditation procedures, and case studies of patients treated with biofeedback. The concept of electronic biofeedback as an "unnatural act" is presented with the goal of placing self-regulation within a more biobehavioral perspective emphasizing the natural patterning of physiological processes.
本文提出了一个基本前提,即学会自我调节反应模式可能会产生与单独控制个体功能时所观察到的不同结果。研究表明,反应模式的自我调节对于以下方面可能是一种特别敏感且有效的方法:(a)揭示完整人类中反应之间的生物学联系和限制;(b)研究多种生理系统如何结合以产生独特的主观体验和对表现的影响;(c)通过训练患者自愿整合和协调特定的认知、自主和运动反应模式,提高生物反馈程序的临床效果。这些假设通过以下基础研究得到说明:涉及血压、心率和脑电图活动模式的生物反馈训练的基础研究、使用情感意象和冥想程序对生理反应模式进行认知自我调节的相关实验,以及接受生物反馈治疗的患者的案例研究。文中提出了将电子生物反馈视为一种“非自然行为”的概念,目的是将自我调节置于更强调生理过程自然模式的生物行为视角中。