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Does training to criterion influence improvement? A follow-up study of EMG and thermal biofeedback

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Abstract

On follow-up 1 to 5 years after therapy, patients in six diagnostic groups who received EMG (N=53)and/or thermal (N=54)biofeedback and who reached criterion levels (EMG ≤1.1 μV; thermal ≥95° F) reported a higher improvement rate than those who had not achieved these criterion levels. Neither the patients nor the therapist were aware of these training criteria during therapy. Most patients received both EMG and thermal biofeedback training. Of the EMG achievers, 93% improved, compared to 65% of the nonachievers. Of the thermal achievers, 96% improved, compared to 76% of the nonachievers. These percentages significantly exceed the high base rate (81%) of long-term improvement in this study. Failure to achieve the criterion level in both modalities was associated with a lower improvement rate (73% did notimprove), while achieving the criterion in only one modality was sufficient to be associated with improvement. Of the patients who did notimprove, 80% had notachieved the EMG criterion, and 88% had not achieved the thermal training criterion. These results question biofeedback therapy outcome studies which show low improvement rates without determining whether self-regulation skills had, in fact, been acquired.

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Libo, L.M., Arnold, G.E. Does training to criterion influence improvement? A follow-up study of EMG and thermal biofeedback. J Behav Med 6, 397–404 (1983). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00846326

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