Phenomenology, Applied Psychophysiology, and Behavioral Medicine      Donald Moss, Ph.D.     
       Prior to commencing training in applied psychophysiology and biofeedback,      this author had the benefit of studying phenomenological psychology and      philosophy for ten years, pursuing applications in psychology, psychiatry,      and education (Moss, 1978, 1981, 1984, 1989a, 1989b, 1992; Bollnow,      1966/1987; Straus, 1930/1982). Phenomenology and applied psychophysiology      may seem to present antagonistic viewpoints with no common ground. However,      in the first half of the twentieth century phenomenology offered to many      European researchers in psychiatry, medicine, and biology the same kind of      breakthrough that self-regulation theory later provided for American      researchers.       In European medicine and psychiatry, phenomenology provided a conceptual      breakthrough which allowed researchers to get beyond the narrow      reductionistic thinking of the time. Phenomenology also provided an      alternative methodological approach--still scientific yet less      restrictive--to a variety of problems, such as, the human experience of time      and space (Straus, 1966, 1963/1969; Minkowksi, 1933/1970); the      neurophysiology and psychology of body image (Plugge, 1970; Straus, 1967);      the disturbed reality perceptions and language of mentally ill persons (Binswanger,      1942; von Gebsattel, 1954); and the fragmented and disorganized thoughts and      actions of brain-damaged individuals (Merleau-Ponty, 1945/1962). The      Heidelberg internist von Weizsacker (1947a, 1947b) applied phenomenology to      illuminate problems in psychosomatic and internal medicine, and the Dutch      physiologist Buytendijk (1965/1974) used this perspective to develop a      phenomenological physiology of human motion and posture in the human      environment.          Phenomenology shares with applied psychophysiology an emphasis on the      unity of mind and body, a dissatisfaction with one-dimensional physicalistic      medicine, and an intolerance for mentalistic models which explain behavior      by hypothesized psychic mechanisms. Phenomenology placed its emphasis on a      philosophy of body-mind, or of the "body-subject," with an accent on how      close the expressive, human body is to personhood. Biofeedback in turn has      placed the emphasis on helping the human individual to enhance awareness and      control over the living body.      The present chapter will orient the reader to some of the most relevant      lessons of phenomenology for the fields of applied psychophysiology and      behavioral medicine: first, through an historical review of phenomenology;      second, through an examination of the phenomenological approach and      methodology; third, through a discussion of the clinical implications of      phenomenology; and fourth, through a review of parallels between the      phenomenology of consciousness and the neurofeedback movement.
  Brief Review of Phenomenological Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology      Phenomenology, as a movement, began with the work of the Austrian      psychologist Franz Brentano who wrote a book titled Psychology from the      Empirical Standpoint (1874). Prior to Brentano psychologists such as Wundt      and Ebbinghaus attempted to explain the qualities of human thinking and      action via "associationism," by referring to the smallest elements of      experience, such as minute sensations and feelings, which come together in      association with one another to form higher mental complexes (Kockelmans,      1967, pp. 53-64). Brentano rejected this idea of breaking psychological      phenomena down into their most minute elements. He adopted an empirical      descriptive approach to psychology, to define and characterize the subject      matter of psychology (Kockelman, 1967, pp. 66-67). He identified      "intentionality" as the decisive characteristic of psychic phenomenonon,      which distinguished them from physical objects. Psychic acts are intentional      because they are oriented or directed toward some specific situation or      object beyond themselves, and can be meaningfully understood only by that      context. Later phenomenological researchers expanded this idea of      intentionality to emphasize the organism-environment relationship (Straus,      1969) and the unity of the human being with the world (Heidegger, 1927/1962;      Merleau-Ponty, 1945/1962).                 The next significant figure in the development of phenomenology was      Edmund Husserl whose painstaking investigations of the field of      consciousness returned over and over to a fine-grained description of the      immediacy of human experiencing. Husserl developed the phenomenological      method as a way of objectively studying many phenomena that common sense      calls subjective: consciousness, the structure of time, and the emergence of      meaning (Husserl, 1900-1901/1970, 1925/1977). Husserl especially called for      the development of a phenomenological psychology which would set aside the      "naturalistic" modes of thinking used by medicine, biology, and physiology,      and remain with a specifically psychological perspective (Husserl,      1925/1977, P. 3; Kockelmans, 1967). He criticized those psychological      theories of his time which sought to explain a human experience by reference      to chemistry, physiology, or neurology, without exploring the immediate      purely psychological sense and organization of the experience (Giorgi,      1970).         Husserl also developed the concept of the "life world" -- the immediate      realm of everyday experiencing which we trust and take for granted before      and after our work days as scientists (1935-1937/1970). For Husserl, the      many scientific realities--the physical, atomic, and sub-atomic universe      studied by the physicist; the vital realm of      living processes studied by the biologist; or the realm of neuro-chemical      processes studied by the neuro-scientist -- are all secondary or derivative      realities, which receive their full meaning by reference back to this      immediate realm of waking and sleeping, living and dying, loving and      working. He does not devalue the scientific perspective but points out that      our scientific understanding of phenomena often proceeds by metaphor,      images, and linguistic constructions borrowed from everyday life. The      ultimate significance of scientific concepts is also dependent on their      impact on this life world. Joe Kamiya (1993), one of the founders of      biofeedback, has observed the same paradox: He emphasizes the contradiction      in the behavioral scientist who awakens in the morning, narrates his dreams      to his wife, discusses his feelings and opinions over breakfast, then      commutes to a laboratory where he excludes private experiences or      introspection as invalid or illusionary.      Phenomenological psychology understands the science of human behavior as      organized around various levels of analysis: Each successive level of      scientific analysis reflects a more microscopic or macroscopic view of the      same reality. The truth does not reside in any one level of analysis, yet      the everyday "life-world" of immediate human experiencing is the level which      gives meaning to the findings of all levels (Moss, 1981). A pathologist uses      anatomical knowledge to identify a lymphoma; this bare "fact" takes on      meaning as the human being faces the risk of death. A lack of availability      of serotonin in the synaptic cleft is a fact for biochemistry; its relevance      is found in the immediate sadness or despondency of the human being in      everyday life. The willful determination of that serotonin-lacking      individual to live fully and push toward greater athletic vigour in everyday      life may in turn impact back on the serotonin level in the unseen synaptic      cleft. The phenomenologist reminds us that the everyday "life world" is the      ultimate frame of reference for all scientific findings. At the end of the      working day the scientist leaves the laboratory and returns to the      macroscopic world of nature, landscapes, and beloved persons.      Later researchers within psychiatry, psychology, and the biological      sciences applied the concepts and approach of phenomenology to their      specific fields with rich results. Of special relevance for applied      psychophysiology are the French phenomenological philosopher Maurice      Merleau-Ponty, the German psychiatrist and neurologist Erwin Straus, and the      Swiss psychiatrist Medard Boss.      Merleau-Ponty shifted the focus of phenomenological research from the field      of consciousness and the structure of internal mental acts, to the structure      of behavior, viewed as intentionally directed toward a situation.      Merleau-Ponty defined the "mental" as the organization or structure of      behavior. In his principle works, The Structure of Behavior (1942/1963) and      the Phenomenology of Perception (1945/1962), Merleau-Ponty took the evidence      of the Gestalt psychologists, especially Kurt Goldstein's investigations of      neurologically damaged individuals, to explore the organization of normal      human movement and the embodied organism's relationship to the environment.           For Merleau-Ponty, phenomenology was never merely introspection; one      knows the human being through his behavioral involvement in situation and      world. "It is through my relation to 'things' that I know myself; inner      perception follows afterward..." (1945/1962, p. 383). For the      phenomenologist no human behavior and no neuro-physiological process can      ultimately be understood apart from its situational context; identify the      correct context and even the most bizarre or pathological behavior is      meaningful.      Merleau-Ponty developed Husserl's idea of an active constitution of      meaning further, with an empirical emphasis. Husserl pointed out that the      human mind actively works on the environment, shaping it and endowing it      with meaning, while being shaped in turn by culture, language, and      situation. Merleau-Ponty emphasized that as a bodily organism the human      being is "condemned to meaning," driven to actively interrogate its      environment, questioning and shaping meaning at a pre-verbal perceptual      level. Further, organism and environment organize and "co-constitute" one      another. The lived body, according to Merleau-Ponty, inhabits the world as      the heart inhabits the organism; the body "breathes life" into the world,      sustains it, and "with it forms a system" (1945/1962, p. 203). The textures      of the earth as we experience it mirror the organization of the human      sensorium.       Similarly motion and perception stand in a reciprocal relation, each shaping      the other (Merleau-Ponty, 1945/1962, p. 101-103). McConnville (1978, p. 110)      showed that "the perceptually meaningful structures of the spatial world are      not something passively registered on the retina, but something actively      solicited by a body which moves through space and engages the world."      For example, the normally hungry human body organizes around itself a      world in which the pathways to obtaining nourishment have a particular      perceptual prominence, and in turn the repeated encounter with varieties of      tempting foods can transform a satiated individual into a state of      subjective, felt hunger. The eating disordered individual with an obsessive      preoccupation perceives food cues where others notice nothing, and at the      same time creates a behavioral environment with cupboards full of junk food.      In turn this environment serves as a cue or trigger for out of control binge      behavior (Moss, 1989a, 1992).      In summary, Merleau-Ponty utilized the philosophical concepts of      intentionality and constitution, along with the psychological data of the      Gestaltists, to express the principles that American psychology      conceptualizes as self-regulation and systemic dysregulation. What emerged      was an image of an active organism contributing to the structure of its      environment, anticipating the neuropsychological view of Pribram (1960): 
       The shift is from the notion that an organism is a relatively      passive protoplasmic mass whose responses      are controlled by the arrangement of environmental      stimuli to a conception of an organism that has considerable control over      what will constitute stimulation. (1960, p. 4)            Erwin Straus drew on many examples from the annals of neurological and      psychiatric pathology, such as the phantom limb, to understand normal human      embodiment and the relationship of the embodied human being to the sensory      world (Straus, 1935/1963). He highlighted the essential experience of the      body as my own and the disruption of this experience in illness, when      disease appears as a foreign power attacking and overpowering one (Straus,      1967, 1963/1969). For Straus, the possessive experience of one's own body      marks the transition from physiology to psychological experiencing. The      elevated EMG level and presence of trigger points in a particular muscle      group is a physiological datum; for the human individual, however, the      essential problem is that "my head hurts, I cannot relax, and I'm becoming      worried about what's wrong with me." The personal pronouns mark the      threshold of psychology and the person (Moss, 1981b,1982).      Medard Boss, a Swiss psychiatrist, entered a long apprenticeship with the      German existential and phenomenological philosopher, Martin Heidegger, and      organized regular seminars with Heidegger and Swiss physicians seeking to      apply the phenomenological perspective to rethink the foundations of both      medicine and psychology (Boss, 1971/1979). Boss defined health as the total      "haleness and wholeness" of the human being, which is characterized by an      openness and flexible responsiveness to the world. In turn he defined      unhealthiness in human existence as "nothing but the privation, blocking,      impairment or constriction of this original openness and freedom" (Boss,      1988). He investigated psychosomatic illness as a means of jamming or      blocking one's openness to the world and to specific threatening situations      (Boss, 1971/1979; Moss, 1978). His theory resembles that of Wilhelm Reich,      who emphasized that muscular tensions serve as an armour against a full      range of emotional experiencing. From this perspective, the reduction of a      chronically elevated muscular tension may be a path toward recovery for a      person with chronic pain, but only if the individual at the same time      accepts the renewed openness to a variety of experiences. When EMG guided      muscular retraining is successful, the individual does more than modify a      physiological fact; the rehabilitated individual also rehabilitates his or      her access to a new world of mobility, action, and possibilities.
       The Phenomenological Approach: A Methodological Pathway for Theory and      Research Phenomenological psychology is more an approach to knowledge than      it is a specific set of skills, facts or concepts. Phenomenology begins      methodologically with a dedication to return to the data of immediate      experience. Husserl counseled a careful cultivation of a "phenomenological      reduction," meaning that one begins by suspending all common sense and      scientific assumptions (Ashworth, 1996). In the moment of experiencing,      Husserl insisted, "we are here all beginners." To perceive freshly, one must      give up the passionate need to draw conclusions--the attitude that one has      understood the answers before posing questions. Further, Maurice      Merleau-Ponty advises that one must seek to recover a sense of wonder in the      face of the world. The phenomenological reduction "slackens the intentional      threads which attach us to the world and thus brings them to our notice...."      (Merleau-Ponty, 1945/1962, p. xiii). This strategy reveals the same world      once again as "strange and paradoxical" (1945/1962, p. xiii).           The phenomenologist achieves a sense of philosophical wonder by his/her      attention to experience but also accomplishes scientific ends. A return to      immediate experience often serves as a corrective against overly hasty      scientific conclusions, by disclosing the assumptions which bias scientific      inquiry. Husserl showed that even in everyday life our immediate perceptions      of the world are shaped through a "garb of ideas" (Ideenkleid) which clothes      the world (Husserl, 1935-1937/1970). The philosopher of science Paul      Feyerabend asserted that: "Observational reports, experimental reports,      'factual' statements, either contain theoretical assumptions or assert them      by the manner in which they are used" (1978, p. 31). In other words, the      particular ideas one takes for granted, about science, physiology, and      behavior, shape the observations and conclusions one arrives at in research.      In 1930, the German psychiatrist and neurologist Erwin Straus used this      "phenomenological reduction" to critique the unrecognized assumptions of      Pavlov's reflex theory and Freud's psychoanalytic drive theory. Straus      accepted many of the observations of Pavlov's research and Freud's case      studies, but showed how scientific assumptions biased their conclusions and      conceptual models. In doing so, Straus arrived at an innovative cognitive      theory of post-traumatic experiencing four decades before the cognitive      psychology of Beck and Lazarus (Moss, 1992). According to this theory, the      individual world of experience is an articulated structure supported by the      pillars of general meanings assimilated by an individual. The traumatic      event and its impact on an individual's experiencing can be understood from      the specific prior organization of this individual's experience-world, and      from the sweeping transformations the traumatic event brings about in this      structure of general meanings.      Erwin Straus contributed another valuable methodological perspective for      research. Straus formulated and repeatedly interrogated data with what he      called the "anthropological question": How must normal human experiencing      and behavior be organized, if such pathological phenomena as this are to be      possible (Straus, 1930/1982)? He expressed this idea already in his      dissertation in neurology: "Only the man who carries in himself a virtual      image of the intact whole is able to correctly perceive a torso" (1926, p.      123).       Straus' anthropological perspective can be applied to the phenomena of      applied psychophysiology: If we are to recognize the significance of      abnormal wave forms in muscular physiology, we might better grasp how such      wave forms occur in normal muscle physiology, and their significance for      intact locomotion within the human world. This means that we must become      more familiar with physiological norms based on well-functioning persons,      but it also means more. If we are to grasp the significance of a reduced      Electrodermal Response or a decreased peripheral temperature, we may need to      understand the transformation in the individual's experience of self and      world at that moment. The altered physiology of the stress response is a      derivative of the threatened organism's cognitive, emotional and behavioral      response to an emergency situation, and physical relaxation through      biofeedback is a strategy which assists the person in modifying that entire      relationship with the threatening situation.      On the American scene, Amedeo Giorgi (1970, 1979) applied the European      phenomenological perspective to propose that psychology be re-conceptualized      as a "human science." He emphasized that in the European and especially the      German sciences there has long existed an accepted distinction between the      natural sciences (Naturwissenschaften) and the "sciences of the human mind      or spirit" (Geisteswissenschaften). The American science of psychology has      largely emphasized the methodologies and assumptions of the natural      sciences--especially explanation, quantitative measurement, and      experimentation. Giorgi proposed a new emphasis within a "human science      psychology" on understanding, qualitative research, and description. In      other words, he proposed a new field of psychology which would spend more      time investigating what shame or anxiety are, how these unique experiences      unfold for the person and the meaning they take on in the individual's      experiencing, and place less emphasis on seeking to causally explain such      phenomena by means of neural mechanisms, correlations with certain life      events, or early predisposing factors. Giorgi proposed a psychology which      would spend less time measuring or predicting an emotional experience, and      more time understanding such phenomena (1970). He asserted that this human      science approach is not unscientific, but rather seeks a methodology and      assumptions which are more appropriate to the subject matter of human      behavior and experience.       Giorgi (1979) cited the German scholar Wilhelm Dilthey (1894) as      proposing a similar view of psychology as a descriptively oriented human      science seeking qualitative understanding. Dilthey's famous motto was:      "Nature we explain, the life of the soul we understand." Erwin Straus      (1930/1982) criticized the typical behavior of many psychological      researchers who proceed partway through a psychological exploration of some      phenomenon, then suddenly disappear below the surface, like a "diving duck      on a lake," and reappear with some submarine explanation about a      neurophysiological mechanism, without ever completing the psychological      investigation.       Giorgi's response to such a critique was that description is a valued      goal within psychological research and should aim at a qualitative      understanding of the meaningful structures of human behavior and experience.      Giorgi recognized the validity of natural scientifically oriented efforts at      explaining behavior by identifying underlying neural or biological      mechanisms. However, he insisted that such investigations should not serve      as a substitute for understanding a psychological phenomenon on its own      level. For example, the locus coeruleus, a subcortical structure in the      lower brain stem, might very well play a significant role in sustaining the      intense emotional arousal among victims of post-traumatic stress disorder,      but psychology must also study the human experience of terror as it is      perceived by each person.      B. F. Skinner voiced a similar critique against accepting any reference      to the "conceptual nervous system" as a cheap substitute for a behavioral      analysis. Skinner's understanding of behavior was different from the      phenomenological concept, but Skinner recognized that levels of analysis or      investigation should not be confused. Skinner also agreed with phenomenology      in regarding "behavior in context" as a fundamental datum and in favoring      relational descriptions over a search for underlying mechanisms (Cf., Chiesa,      1992).      Further, Merleau-Ponty showed in several of his re-analyses of the      findings of Gestalt psychology, that causative effects at the mechanistic or      physiological level are often changed by events at the human level of      meaning and experience (Merleau-Ponty, 1942/1963). Merleau-Ponty utilized      the example of El Greco, the Spanish painter, who was astigmatic and painted      stunning canvases with a mystic quality, showing elongated human beings and      elongated architectural structures. Merleau-Ponty asserts that a simple      physiological explanation, that El Greco's astigmatism caused him to paint      elongated, mystic pictures, is inadequate and over-simplified. Rather, El      Greco's mechanistic visual disorder served his artistic vision: "... his      liberty consisted only in justifying this accident of nature by infusing it      with a metaphysical meaning" (1942/1963, p. 203).       We could also cite the more contemporary findings of      psychoneuroimmunology, which remind us that bio-chemical or neuro-physiological      mechanisms alone rarely give a full account of a human disease process.      Rather, we must have recourse to the behavior, perception, cognitions, and      affective experiencing of the person with the disease. To paraphrase the      Greek physician, Hippocrates, it is not so important to know what kind of      disease the person has, as to know what kind of person has the disease      (Davies, 1996). Impaired immune function can causally render an individual      vulnerable to cancer, yet the will to live, a sense of humor, cultivation of      relaxation and meditative practices, personal journalling, and a variety of      similar emotionally and spiritually therapeutic exercises can in turn alter      those same immune functions in measurable ways (Borysenko, 1987; Cousins,      1979; Simonton, Mathews-Simonton, & Creighton, 1980; Siegel, 1986;      Pennebaker, Kiecolt-Glaser, & Glaser, 1988; and Pennebaker, 1995). The human      world of experience, creative acts, and meaning is the ultimate framework      within which all physiological processes within a human being are ultimately      organized. This is the final environment toward which human bio-chemical and      neuro-physiologic processes are directed.       Finally, American phenomenologically oriented researchers in psychology,      philosophy, and the health sciences have developed a number of creative      methodologies to place a greater emphasis on empirical and systematic      gathering and analysis of data. Giorgi (1970, 1979, 1985) has been a major      influence on these qualitative methodologies. The review of these      methodologies goes beyond the scope of this chapter. The reader is referred      to Aanstoos (1984), Giorgi (1985), Karlsson (1993), and Leder (1992), as      well as to the Journal of Phenomenological Psychology, many issues of which      contain empirical, phenomenological studies, with references to current      methodological developments. 
  The Phenomenological Approach and Clinical Care      Thomas Moore, in his recent work, Care of the Soul, expressed the      clinical equivalent to the phenomenological attitude:                       ... observance means first of all listening and looking carefully        at what is revealed in the suffering. An intent to heal can get         in the way of the healing. By doing less more is accomplished.         (p. 10)            The core of the phenomenological challenge to the behavioral medicine      clinician is the invitation to enter into the world and story of the      patient. The individual seeking help is isolated within personal suffering      and troubles, and the essential guiding principle of the phenomenological      approach is to stand with the patient and bridge that isolation. If the      clinician is to succeed in entering the patient's concerns, then he or she      must not only conceptualize but also co-experience the patient's unique      situation (Moss, 1989b, p. 196).      From the phenomenological perspective, health and disease are not simple      physiological facts, rather each involves qualitative differences in the      individual's relationship to the physical environment, in personal      temporality and spatiality, in relationships to the family and social world,      and in the struggle for identity (Moss, 1992, p. 179). As the Dutch      phenomenological psychiatrist Van den Berg showed, the sick individual --      whether mentally or physically ill -- lives a different existence and      inhabits a perceptually and experientially different world (1966, 1972).      Illness and suffering turn a person back upon him- or herself. The world      seems less inviting, loses its appeal, while at the same time one senses      that life goes on for others without one. Understanding the patient's      objective medical condition, as measured through a complete blood count, an      MRI, and other measures, without empathy for the "world of the sickbed,"      leaves the behavioral medicine clinician only half prepared.      Recent phenomenological investigations have explored the personal      experiencing of individuals faced with a variety of conditions and      situations: autism (Zaner, 1981), bereavement in general and the death of a      child (Smith, 1975; Brice, 1991), obesity (Moss, 1984, 1992), back pain      (Murphy, 1978), schizophrenia (Davidson, 1992), multiple sclerosis (Toombs,      1992), AIDS (Murphy, 1992), and adjustment to retirement (Hornstein and      Wapner, 1984). Such phenomenological descriptive investigations are valuable      in opening up the alien world of the suffering person, who otherwise remains      isolated with his or her malady.       The clinician's task, prior to implementing any specific technical      intervention, and throughout the course of any treatment, is to join with      the patient in his or her specific, altered mode of being in the world. The      clinician need not become psychotic with the psychotic, or experience a loss      of continuity with the neurologically impaired person, yet must lend      imagination and intuition to perceiving those disjointed and overwhelming      realities with the suffering individual.       Aaron Beck has developed a diversity of cognitive therapeutic      interventions for depression and anxiety. However, he counsels us to begin      phenomenologically, by listening to the client's perception of reality. All      confrontation and technical intervention follow this initial moment of      experiencing with the patient (Beck, 1979).
  Phenomenology, Consciousness, and the Neurofeedback Movement      The resurgence of research in EEG feedback brings applied psychophysiology      back into the realm of diverse states of consciousness. Neurofeedback      involves the task of learning new modes of attending or being present.      Phenomenology began as a philosophy of consciousness, and has a rich      tradition of research into what it means to be conscious, to be present, or      to attend differently. This section will review the phenomenology of      consciousness briefly, highlighting four concepts relevant for the      neurophysiology of consciousness and the clinical application of EEG      feedback.                First, for phenomenology consciousness is not inside the head, and is for      the most part not an internal experience. Rather, consciousness consists of      an attunement and an orienting process toward objects and situations in the      world. The individual is conscious of something, and this something is in      the majority of instances something beyond the physical bounds of one's own      body. Actual internal experiencing, the focusing on pain, physical      sensations, or on some internal fear or worry, is often a morbid phenomenon,      characteristic of a troubled person or a diseased or injured body.       The variety of states of consciousness involve variations in how one is      present to the current situation. Research on the EEG shows that the      dominant frequency of electrical activity in the cortex covaries with      changes in one's attunement or manner of being aware of the present      environment. When the dominant electrical activity on the EEG is in the 13      to 35 Herz range (Beta waves), we find a wakeful individual, actively      scanning his environment, focusing on specific objects or problems, and      consciously thinking or deliberating about his current task. As we shift      toward slower wave activity, in the 8 to 12 Herz range (Alpha activity), we      find the person conscious, but more receptive and less task or goal      directed. As the cortical activity slows further, in the 4 to 7 Herz range      (Theta), we find the person in a kind of reverie, with wandering attention,      loosely connected (hypnogogic) imagery, and drowsiness.       This initial phenomenological characterization of the states of      consciousness accompanying various cortical frequency ranges is      oversimplistic, because we are speaking as though fairly wide frequency      bands were the only relevant variable in describing cortical activity.      Neuropsychologically the situation is much more complex. One can perceive      qualitative differences in the wave form of various theta range electrical      waves; these and other differences within the same frequency band may have      experiential correlates and functional consequences. Tansey (1985; 1993)      reports that narrow 1 Herz frequency bands differ qualitatively in their      significance for neuropsychological functioning. Sheer (1988), Sams (1995),      and others believe that activity in several neural structures centered      around 40 Herz is optimal for focused learning and memory tasks. Further,      the right-left symmetry, the topographical distribution of electrical      activity, and the subcortical orgins of a specific pattern of excitation,      and the absolute and relative power of brain activity all have significance      which requires much more investigation (Sterman, in press; Abarbanel, 1995).      In the future the phenomenology of the experiential correlates of these      diverse EEG states may come to rival the intricacies of Hindu and Buddhist      descriptions of human consciousness (Rama, 1981; Pannikar, 1977).       Neurofeedback training involves training the individual in alternative      ways of being present to situations. The fundamental promise of      neurofeedback is that it appears to present a simple tool useful in training      subjects to shift one's state of consciousness, or mode of being present,      through the use of immediate EEG feedback about one's currently dominant      brain state. This promise of neurofeedback is gaining credibility in      applications such as the treatment of attention deficit disorder and      addictive disorders. The promise remains to be proven with a host of other      applications. Whether training the EEG is the most effective pathway to      change for a specific problem or disorder, remains an empirical and not a      phenomenological question. To date for instance, it appears to be more      clinically-effective to treat panic disorder by cognitive-behavioral      therapy, but new protocols may qualify this conclusion.      For the individual with attention deficit and hyperactivity disorder      neurofeedback means learning a more focused and organized mode of presence      toward a specific academic problem or work situation. This is an alteration      in a state of consciousness. Neurophysiologically this involves giving      feedback to prompt and to guide the individual toward the suppression of      slow wave, less organized cortical rhythms (theta range activity), and the      enhancement of faster wave, more organized rhythms (beta range activity).           For the anxious individual the training process is approximately reverse;      the individual EEG baseline profiles vary a great deal in anxiety, but      frequently involve excesses of upper range beta wave activity, and a      scarcity of alpha range slower wave activity. The training process involves      learning a less vigilant, less tightly focused mode of presence, and in an      experiential sense a more trusting, open, and receptive approach to      situations.       Older descriptions from the phenomenology of meditative and mystical      consciousness come to mind, as parallel to this neurotherapy for anxiety.      The German mystic Johannes Tauler, living in the 14th century, advised the      spiritual novice to seek Gelassenheit, a mental and spiritual attitude of      "letting go-ness" (Moss, 1980). Tauler counseled the Christian seeking a      mystical oneness with God to give up effortful focusing on tasks and ends,      to cease measuring himself or herself by performance or achievement. Tauler      encouraged the beginner to learn inner stillness and to overcome inward      restlessness and disorder. Then one could perform all of one's actions from      this serene center (Moss, 1980).      The German philosopher Heidegger discussed a similar philosophical and      spiritual process of opening oneself, for which he used the same German      term, Gelassenheit or letting-be-ness. He advocated the individual living in      today's disordered amd rootless technological world to cultivate this      philosophical style of thinking, which creates a a "clearing in being,"      allowing what exists to shine forth in its own manner. Heidegger emphasizes      that this change in one's approach transforms not only one's inner self, but      also one's relatedness to the world as experienced (Heidegger, 1954; von      Eckartsberg & Valle, 1981).       When neurofeedback guides the anxious individual to enhance alpha-theta      range slow cortical activity, we may be assisting the individual practically      toward a similar spiritual and emotional transformation. Eugene Peniston's      protocol for neurofeedback with alcoholic and addictive individuals combines      visualization exercizes with neurofeedback, and explicitly draws on a      similar kind of self-transformation (Peniston & Kukolski, 1989).      Second, when one's state of consciousness alters, the physiognomy or face      of the world is transformed. This principle has implications for a variety      of changes in consciousness. To wake up and become conscious, for example,      means in an everyday sense that one is aware once again of having a      surrounding world. Ethologists have observed that an animal's virtual      behavioral environment is organized around the animal's instinctual needs      and drives -- of hunger or thirst, for example. The human individual's state      of consciousness -- which includes moodedness, cognitive expectancies, and      motivational sets -- similarly affects the manner in which this surrounding      world will be organized and experienced in this moment.      This principle can be illustrated by examples from psychopathology. The      paranoid individual vigilantly and suspiciously scans the surrounding      environment, seeking threat and danger, especially signs that the hostile      ones are out there intending to do one harm. Such a person sees a car pass,      that might have gone by yesterday, and wonders what or who is behind it, and      what danger this might portend. Such an individual does not experience the      danger as within his or her own head. Rather, the paranoia-world as it is      immediately experienced presents a face full of potential threats and      hazards.       In turn the normal consciousness of an individual feeling secure in his or      her familiar neighborhood or home, is marked by an emphasis on the presence      of familiar and comforting objects, sounds, and atmospheres. The German poet      Goethe comments on the individual awakening in the night to find that "Earth      -- this night too thou art abiding" (Faust, Part II).      Third, the technical interventions of neurofeedback, because they involve      a potential modification in states of consciousness, touch on the deepest      existential dimensions of the human person. It is these existential      dimensions which phenomenological psychologists and philosophers have      explored for much of this century. The rich cameos to be found in      phenomenological investigation may spark understanding of changes reported      by patients in neurofeedback.      We will touch briefly on the example of the phenomenology of memories and      fantasies of childhood. Access to and understanding of childhood      experiencing is crucial for psychotherapy and many applications of      neurofeedback. Elizabeth Loftus (1994) has recently focused on the dubious      validity of repressed memories recovered in psychotherapy. This is a      critical question, in both clinical practice and legal proceedings. The      phenomenological approach, however, deepens the question beyond the simple      problem of factual accuracy. In his book The poetics of reverie, Gaston      Bachelard (1960/1969) carried out a phenomenological reflection on the      images of childhood available in poetry, to explore adult reveries of      childhood. Bachelard observes that when one turns in daydreaming to one's      own childhood, one discovers not one but several child faces coming to meet      one, each seemingly a distinct person:             We were several ... in our primitive life. Only through the         accounts of others have we come to know of our unity. On the         thread of our history as told by others, year by year, we end up         resembling ourselves. We gather all our beings around the unity of         our name. (Bachelard, 1960/1969, p. 99)            Donnenberg (1973, p. 84) cited the German novelist Arno Schmidt, who      similarly observed that, even beyond childhood, life is not originally      experienced as a unity:             The events of our life spring forth. On the string of        meaninglessness, of         omnipresent leisure, the pearl chain of tiny unities of inner and outer               experiences is threaded. From midnight to midnight is not one day at all,               but rather 1440 minutes (and of these, on the other hand, at the most 50               are of any significance!) ...         My Life?! is no continuum! ... [rather]: a tray of glistening snapshots.            Bachelard proposes that access to childhood through reverie and      reminiscence lends unity and depth to adult identity. He observes that      imagination and memory are so interwoven as we look back at childhood, that      we may more accurately say that we are remembering our fantasies, and      fantasizing our memories: "The imagination ceaselessly revives and      illustrates the memory" (1960/1969, p. 20). In adult life childhood remains      a dimension ever present; the childhood within us yields a "consciousness of      roots" and according to Bachelard comforts the entire tree of one's being      (1960/1969, p. 20).       In an earlier book The poetics of space (1958/1964), Bachelard explored      the memories and fantasies of childhood which emerge as one pictures one's      original childhood home. The house for Bachelard is an archetype of the self      and world of the child:             For our house is our corner of the world. As has often been said, it is               our first universe, a real cosmos in every sense of the word. (p. 4)
         Of course, thanks to the house, a great many of our memories are         housed, and if the house is a bit elaborate, if it has a cellar and a         garrett, nooks and corridors, our memories have refuges that are all         the more clearly delineated. (p. 8)                   Memories of childhood adhere to the significant places of childhood, the      grandmother's kitchen with the fragrance of fresh bread, the father's      workshop with its forbidding shelves of tools, or the living room where the      family Christmas tree stood and where one still hears echoes of the carols      sung by the family.          The childhood which the adult recovers is not merely an array of facts,      but a clustered series of those other distinct childhoods which the child      has dreamed, the childhoods he or she wished for, as well as those which      should have been. In this regard Bachelard (1960/1969, p. 112) cites the      poet Alexandre Arnoux:              Of childhood I have so many        That I would get lost counting them.             Bachelard also describes childhood as remaining virtually incomplete.      When some phrase or event turns an adult back in revery, the remembering      surpasses the bare facts and rounds out the story (1960/1969, p. 106).      Bachelard views this reminiscence and fictional completion of one's      childhood as endowing childhood with layers of meaning it did not originally      possess. Bachelard sees this recovery and completion of childhood as part of      the "integration of the self" described by Jung.      Many patients who undergo physical and sexual abuse or other traumatic      experiences in early life have little or no access to reveries of childhood,      or to the identity integration process described by Bachelard. Rather they      are pursued by the terror lurking in their memories, or haunted by an      absence of memory. The most extreme instance of this is the individual with      a post-traumatic dissociative disorder. Dissociative individuals are caught      up living in an extreme form of response stereotypy. The child, unable to      face the full brutality and betrayal of the original abuse, dissociates      mentally. His or her awareness simply "goes away," or the event is      experienced numbly and without feeling, or another self crystalizes in the      moment of the abuse and "takes over." This original protective response,      however, increases the likelihood of continued reliance on dissociative      strategies throughout life. The process of dissociation prevents the      individual each time from experiencing the same memory or the same type of      emotional experience, which is never de-sensitized or mastered. Each      near-encounter evokes the same self-protective sequence of behavioral and      cognitive escaping, without real learning.      A patient reported to me that each time our therapeutic discussion      approached the time of her second grade year, she experienced entering a      tunnel with dim light, and had a sense of dimly seeing the same events at      her grandmother's house. As she tried to see more clearly she felt a      shattering, like of breaking glass and felt herself fragmented along with      the image. These shattering moments released extreme pain, disconnected from      any specific memory, and overwhelming despair. She lost any desire to live,      despaired of ever escaping her painful emotions, and became more avoidant of      discussing her childhood.       Many therapists doing verbal, psychodynamic psychotherapy with      dissociative patients in past years have encountered many such moments, in      which the patient is re-traumatized over and over in a therapy without      outcome.       The neurophysiology of traumatic anxiety is relevant here (van der Kolk,      1987; Kolb, 1987), highlighting a variety of brain mechanisms and processes      which are activated in extreme post-traumatic and dissociative experiencing.      These neurophysiological mechanisms reinforce the hopeless vicious circle      experienced by post-traumatic patients. The locus coeruleus in the lower      brainstem may be chronically aroused, activating noradrenergic pathways to      the limbic system, the cerebral cortex, the cerebelum, and the hippocampus.      With repeated traumatization, these mechanisms escape inhibitory control,      and produces chronic emotional arousal. Zajonc ( 1984) proposes that there      are direct neuropsychological pathways linking the retina and other aspects      of the sensorium to these affective excitatory mechanisms, without cognitive      mediation. Experientially the individual becomes hypervigilant and      oversensitive to a variety of triggers in everyday life, and remains unable      to regain control of his or her emotions. For example, without warning and      without thought, a certain kind of light reflecting in her windshield      excites terror in a woman driving her auto, who then can neither calm or      control her panic.       Consequently purely cognitive therapies often fail to interrupt the      sequence from a momentary sensation or image to overwhelming physiologic      arousal and emotional terror. The practical lesson is clear: Additional      techniques such as neurofeedback, EMDR, and hypnotic strategies are      necessary to modify the patient's response. Such strategies raise the hope      of interrupting this vicious cycle,      which is both an experiential and neurophysiological impediment to recovery.           Carol Manchester (1994) has advocated the use of a modified Peniston      neurofeedback protocol for individuals with post-traumatic dissociative      identity disorders, such as multiple personality disorder. The cultivation      of a slower wave alpha-theta brain state appears to facilitate both a faster      and more controlled recovery and healing of dissociated realms of traumatic      memories and childhood experiences. She proposes that teaching the patient      to re-integrate traumatic memories while in this state of low      neurophysiological arousal arousal minimizes the risk of re-traumatization.      For the clinician this novel approach is exciting, because individuals with      dissociative syndromes are treatment challenges. From the phenomenological      point of view it appears that both Manchester and Peniston are using      neurofeedback to train the patient to enter a receptive state of mind more      conducive to reverie and personality integration.      Fourth, phenomenological psychology insists that brain functions,      consciousness, and overt behavior stand in a circular, interactive      relationship. The current bias within biological psychology and psychiatry      tends to view the biochemistry of neural function as causing variations in      consciousness and behavior. However, current neuroscience research shows a      much more compex and reciprocal relationship between brain and behavior.       For example, recent research using PET imaging on the neural function of      individuals with severe obsessive compulsive disorder shows abnormally high      glucose metabolism in the caudate nucleus as well as in the the fronto-orbital      cortex and cingulate gyrus (Baxter, 1990). Pharmacological treatment with a      selective seritonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) such as Fluoxetine tends to      normalize the glucose metabolism in these neural centers. The decrease in      OCD symptoms, as measured by the Yale-Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale (Y-BOCS),      correlates with the percent decrease in metabolic activity in the caudate      nucleus. However, behavioral therapy including repeated       exposure to anxiety-triggering situations also normalizes the glucose      metabolism in the same neural areas (Baxter, Schwartz, Bergman, Szuba, et      al, 1992). Behavior changes here produce neurophysiological changes.      Further, an earlier study by Isaac Marks and colleagues suggested that      the therepeutic effects were significantly lower when patients with OCD took      a seritonin stimulating medication (in this case Clomipramine), but were      instructed to avoid anxiety-provoking situations (Marks, Lelliott, Basoglu,      Noshirvani, Monteiro, Cohen, & Kasvikis, 1988). The behavioral exposure      appeared to facilitate the pharmacologically triggered changes.      The close linkages among neuro-chemistry, neural function, physiology,      cognition, and behavior are circular. Intervention at any level may effect      or potentiate significant change at all other levels. This "bio-neuro-physio-cognitive-behavioral      model" represents an extension of Elmer Green's "psychophysiological      principle, which states that: "...every change in the physiological state is      accompanied by an appropriate change in the mental emotional state,      conscious or unconscious, and conversely, every change in the mental      emotional state is accompanied by an appropriate change in the physiological      state" (Green, Green, & Walters, 1970). The challenge to behavioral medicine      is to identify and verify specific interventions which make use of this      principle with health impacting, clinically effective and cost-effective      results.
 
 
  Conclusion: A Creative Partnership for Phenomenology and Applied      Pychophysiology      The technique of biofeedback was named only 25 years ago, at the first      conference in Santa Monica in 1969 of the Biofeedback Research Society, now      known as the Association for Applied Psychophysiology and Biofeedback.      Present in the creation of biofeedback were researchers whose primary      interest were in the study of private internal experiencing (Kamiya, 1976),      the psychology of consciousness (Ornstein, 1972), altered states of      consciousness and meditation (Tart, 1975), Eastern religion, and the      expansion of human potential and human awareness (Kamiya, 1993; Green &      Green, 1977). A recent letter appearing in the Biofeedback newsmagazine, and      signed by several leading figures in the Association for Applied      Psychophysiology and Biofeedback called for a re-affirmation of the original      values of the organization and a return to the original emphasis on      "consciousness, self-awareness, spirit, and self-regulation" (Kall, 1993).                          Phenomenology evolved into a school of psychiatry and psychology studying      the human being involved in an active and self-actualizing dialogue with the      physical and cultural environment. This philosophical image of the human      being converges with the psycho-physiological theory of a self-regulating      biopsychosocial human organism in a systemic relationship with its      environment. The intent of this chapter is to encourage a new partnership,      in which the phenomenological approach and the rich findings of      phenomenological investigations may contribute to the theoretical and      empirical progress of applied psychophysiology and mind-body medicine.
 
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