Author:
Gabriel Damien,Chabin Thibault,Joucla Coralie,Bussière Thomas,Tarka Aleksandra,Galmes Nathan,Comte Alexandre,Bertrand Guillaume,Giustiniani Julie,Haffen Emmanuel
Abstract
AbstractNeurofeedback has been shown to be a promising tool for learning to regulate one’s own emotions in healthy populations and in neuropsychiatric disorders. While it has been suggested that neurofeedback performance improves when sensory feedback is related to the pathology under consideration, it is still difficult to represent in real time a proper feedback representative of our emotional state. Since emotion is a central part of people’s dealings with artworks, we have initiated a collaboration between neuroscientists and artists to develop a visual representation of emotions that can be used in neurofeedback experiences. As a result of this collaboration, emotions were represented as particles, moving in a white sphere according to valence and arousal levels. In this study, several possibilities for particle control were explored: direction of particles, their concentration in a specific place, or their gravity. 107 participants evaluated these performances, either in laboratory condition or at various scientific and artistic events. At the end of the experiment, questionnaires were distributed to participants who were asked to indicate on scales ranging from 0 to 5 how artistic the different representations were and could be used as a clinical activity, whether they thought they had successfully controlled the particles during the neurofeedback exercise, and whether they had appreciated the experience. We found that influing on the direction and concentration of particles was considered the most artistic with an average score around 3/5. 47% of the participants considered the concentration of particles as artistic. In addition, although this is not the purpose of this study, we found that participants could significantly control the direction of particles during this session. These encouraging results constitute a first step before evaluating the effectiveness of our emotional neurofeedback over several sessions in healthy, then pathological populations.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory