Neurofeedback: How some executives give their brain waves a workoutNeurofeedback: How some executives give their brain waves a workout

By Dr. Ed Carlton

Successful CEOs and entrepreneurs as well as ambitious middle managers often seek ways to keep their mental faculties sharp to stay ahead of their competition.

But training your brain to perform at peak levels isn’t easy.

And that’s why some executives are turning to neurofeedback sessions — a kind of biofeedback for the brain — to improve their mind’s executive function and performance.

Improved health and mental focus can help you balance the stressors of daily living while keeping you headed toward your goals. For example, for people who are seeking a promotion or a career shift or planning to start their own business, neurofeedback training can help improve their executive function and their performance.

Inspirational speaker Tony Robbins is a fan of neurofeedback training. So is Olympic beach volleyball champion Kerri Walsh-Jennings.

Neurofeedback is fitness training for the brain, which is perhaps why it’s appealing even to Olympic athletes.

Here’s how it works: The process begins with a brain map, which locates the specific areas that need help to function more efficiently. Once these areas are identified, neurofeedback training can improve their function. The technology uses computers to monitor brain-wave patterns while the patient relaxes and watches a movie or video. The visual and audio inputs are varied, providing feedback based on the training goals from the brain map. The results are lasting, and there are no side effects.

While neurofeedback can be used to improve executive function, it’s also used to treat ADD and ADHD, depression, autism, seizures, traumatic brain injuries, and post-traumatic-stress disorder.

There are a few important facts business executives should know if they’re interested in the benefits of neurofeedback training.

Why the brain’s executive function is important

Executive function refers to the complex neurological processes in the brain’s frontal lobe that help you plan, manage time, and get organized. This is where we learn to keep details in our head, come up with different ways to solve problems, and start and complete tasks. This requires a complex set of skills such as being able to pay attention, self-monitor, and regulate emotions.

How neurofeedback training helps

Neurofeedback can help you regain your focus and reduce mental clutter that can impact memory and organization. After patients start the training regimen, many of them tell us the first thing they notice right away is that their quality of sleep improves. As training continues, performance improvements follow.

Professional development as self-care

Neurofeedback training doesn’t alter your personality or change who you are. It’s simply a training gym of sorts to help your brain make new connections that keep it in balance, which helps better regulate emotional states, improves attention and focus, and enhances working memory. For anyone in business, all of these skills are keys to improving your performance edge, helping you break out of patterns or start new ones, and sharpening your cognitive performance over time.

The weekly neurofeedback sessions take about half an hour and are painless and non-invasive. The results also last a long time.

Once your brain learns new ways to respond, it continues learning much the way we remember how to swim year after year.

Dr. Ed Carlton is founder of the Carlton Neurofeedback Center and author of the book “The Answer.” He is a chiropractor but prior to that worked for nine years as an engineer.

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1 COMMENT

  1. Neurofeedback definitely can give one an edge in life. Between improving sleep and reducing anxiety, depression and improving concentration, brain training often allows for the brain to come up with novel solutions to challenging problems.

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