000 02116nam a22002537a 4500
003 OSt
005 20240305192420.0
008 220404b |||||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
020 _a 1475794622
020 _a9781475794625
040 _cManual
100 _aJ.G. Fisher
_934158
245 _aBiofeedback
_b Studies in Clinical Efficacy
250 _a illustrated
260 _aThe University of Texas Health Science Center a/ San Antonio San Antonio, Texas
_bSpringer Science & Business Media
_c2013
300 _a 370 pages
520 _aThe chapters of this book were prepared as task force reports under the aegis of the Biofeedback Society of America (BSA). The impetus for the present generation of task force reports can be dated back to 1982, when John D. Rugh, as President-Elect of the Society, announced that the updating of the task force reports would be given high priority during his term as President. An ad hoc Task Force Committee was appointed in 1983, and the committee set the following objectives: (1) solicit a widely based stream of input from all segments of the Biofeedback Society of America, (2) establish a peer review system to assure the highest degree of scholarship and an unbiased approach, (3) select for area authors only individuals who have profound knowledge of the area and who have demonstrated the ability to extend understanding by reviewing and criticizing the literature, (4) prepare all reports according to a standard ized format, and (5) publish all the reports simultaneously. Input came from several sources. Many people responded with ideas and suggestions to an announcement in the BSA Newsletter that the task force reports were being revised. In 1984, a symposium was conducted at the BSA annual meeting, which included round table dis cussions and dialogues between task force report authors and the BSA membership.
600 _xPsychology / General
_928110
600 _xPsychology / Clinical Psychology
_928137
600 _xPsychology › General
_928111
700 _a J.P. Hatch
_934159
700 _aJ.D. Rugh
_934160
942 _2ddc
_cEB
999 _c6323
_d6323