Patent for Brainwave Feedback Technology to Help Treat Anxiety and Depression

Sarah Ostadabbas

ECE Professor Sarah Ostadabbas has received a patent for “System and method for providing neurofeedback from steady-state visual evoked potentials to target affect-biased attention for treating therapeutic outcomes such as anxiety and depression.”


Abstract Source: USPTO

A neurofeedback system includes an EEG apparatus, a presentation apparatus and a controller. The controller is configured to: (i) cause the presentation apparatus to display an overlaid image to the user that comprises a first image flickering at a first frequency and a second image flickering at a second frequency different than the first frequency, the first image being an affective distractor stimulus image and the second image being a task-relevant stimulus image, (ii) receive from the EEG apparatus a number of first steady-state visual evoked potential (SSVEP) signals generated in response the first image of the overlaid image and a number of second SSVEP signals generated in response the second image of the overlaid image, and (iii) calculate feedback indicative of how much attention of the was user allocated to the task-relevant stimulus image versus how much attention of the user was allocated to the affective distractor stimulus image.

Related Faculty: Sarah Ostadabbas

Related Departments:Electrical & Computer Engineering