Abstract

Unlike most applications of biofeedback, the outcome goal and the aim of the present investigation was to increase arousal by the provision of feedback. The ability to generate psychophysiological arousal during noxious imagery may be therapeutically beneficial to individuals receiving emotive imagery therapies, and in the present study we evaluated biofeedback as a means of correcting psychophysiological deficits in imagery. Thirty psychophysiologically unreactive undergraduates were randomly assigned to skin-resistance-level biofeedback, false-feedback, or no-feedback conditions for six sessions of assessment and treatment. The methodology controlled for placebo, practice, and initial value effects. Significant increases in skin resistance level, heart rate, and frontalis electromyography accrued to the biofeedback group but not the control groups, and these gains persisted when biofeedback was withdrawn. Subjective measures showed no changes. The results support the usefulness of biofeedback as a remedy for imagery underarousal.

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