A team of researchers has found that trainee eye surgeons can significantly improve their surgical skills by regulating their own brainwave activity, using a process called neurofeedback.
Published in BMC Neuroscience 2009 this month, the study, led by Tomas Ros and Professor John Gruzelier, both from Goldsmiths, University of London, specifically looked at the effects of self-regulating brainwaves on National Health Service trainee ophthalmic microsurgeons.
Neurofeedback is a kind of ‘brain training’ which involves brain activity being monitored by sensors, so that individuals can see the activity on a screen. The individual being monitored can then see their brain activity in real time – and can then try to affect the activity themselves (self-regulating). The idea is that the individual can then ‘train’ their brain to perform a specific task more efficiently.
The study found that neurofeedback training provided significant improvement in surgical technique in the trainee eye surgeons whilst also considerably reducing the time they spend performing the surgery as well.
Science Daily (Thanks Tiram)



Wow! this is pretty cool
wouldn’t that kind of give the illusion of operating on themselves?!
Cool. Reminds me that in “Earth” (1990), David Brin predicted that people would end up using this technology to train their brains to release endorphins, thus creating a whole new class of stoners.
He also predicted the WWW: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earth_(novel)
Wow! That is damn impressive!!
Ehehehe …. that’s pretty weird. Isn’t it in people’s normal self to improve this all by theirselvs? It’s probably for certain people who have trouble focussing .. Experience improves most things, with time. Quite normal.
I dont think they were taking too much time till now.
This begs the question: Did their performance improve through mind control or through the knowledge they were being evaluated? For example, numerous studies show that student performance improves when the students are told they’re participating in an experimental teaching study, even when the teaching methods are totally traditional. Ahh, but this begs the question: If performance improves, who cares why? And this . . .
[...] link is being shared on Twitter right now. @derrenbrown said Blog post: Mind Control Can Make You A [...]