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East meets west: a mobile brain-computer system that helps children living in poverty learn to self-regulate

Resource type
Date created
2018-06-12
Authors/Contributors
Author (aut): Antle, Alissa
Author (aut): Chesick, Leslie
Author (aut): Cramer, Emily
Abstract
Children living in poverty often suffer multiple forms of trauma, which impedes their ability to effectively self-regulate negative emotions, such as anxiety, and to focus their attention. As a result, many of these children struggle at school. Our work explores the effectiveness of using a mindfulness-oriented, neurofeedback-based, brain-computer system to help teach children living in poverty to self-regulate anxiety and attention. Our system, called Mind-Full, was specifically designed for illiterate girls who attend an NGO-funded school in Pokhara, Nepal. In this paper, we present the results of a waitlist control field experiment with 21 girls who completed an intervention using the Mind-Full system. Our results indicated that a 6-week Mind-Full intervention was viable and that children were able to transfer self-regulation skills learned using our system into real-world settings and continue to self-regulate successfully after 2 months. We present our findings as a validation of the effectiveness of mobile neurofeedback-based interventions to help young children living in poverty develop self-regulation skills. We conclude with a discussion of the results, methodological challenges of working in the developing world, and advice for future investigations of the effectiveness of neurofeedback applications for children.
Document
Identifier
DOI: 10.1007/s00779-018-1166-x
Publication details
Publication title
Personal and Ubiquitous Computing
Document title
East meets west: a mobile brain-computer system that helps children living in poverty learn to self-regulate
Date
2018
Volume
22
Issue
4
First page
839
Last page
866
Copyright statement
Copyright is held by the publisher with many rights continuing to also be held by the author(s).
Scholarly level
Peer reviewed?
Yes
Member of collection

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