Your diet's dialed, your body's buff. Now plug in to
the frontier of athletic performance—brain-wave biofeedback. It
could revolutionize your game.
IT WAS JUST past dawn on a mid-March Wednesday morning—cool
and overcast, comfortable cycling weather. Ultradistance racer Cathy Busby
was bike-commuting to work from her home in Holly Springs, North Carolina,
part of her routine training for the 3,000-mile Race Across America. The
previous summer, she had won the women's qualifier in Capron, Illinois,
and was now considered afavorite to win the grueling cross-country road
race coming up in June. But her aspirations for a Race Across America
title fell hard that day. A pickup truck pulled out from an intersection,
broadsided Busby, and left her crumpled by the side of the road with seven
broken bones, including one in her right hand, both elbows, and a tibia
shattered so severely that it required a metal plate and five screws to
put it back together.
Three months later, Busby was back on her bike, spinning
through easy miles. But while she was rebounding relatively quickly from
her physical injuries, the psychological damage left by the accident still
plagued her. "Any time I came up to an intersection, I'd wait for
all the cars to go through before I went," says Busby. "I stopped
biking to work. My times on training rides were way down. I could feel
all this anger building up. On one ride, I had a meltdown—I was
screaming at everyone and everything because I was so frustrated."
The cyclist turned to Dan Chartier, a psychologist in Raleigh,
North Carolina. Chartier proposed an experimental procedure called neurofeedback,
a type of biofeedback that makes "automatic" functions like
brain-wave levels perceptible, and therefore controllable. Chartier pasted
sensors to Busby's scalp and then connected her to an electroencephalograph
(neurofeedback is sometimes called brain-wave or EEG biofeedback) to monitor
her brain waves. Per Chartier's instructions, the cyclist coaxed herself
through various states of relaxation. When she achieved the desired brain-wave
frequency, a tone sounded from the machine. The more she practiced, the
easier it became to make the sound. After about three weeks of once-a-week
sessions in the lab she noticed a dramatic improvement in her riding.
"I felt a lot more confident," recalls Busby, who went on to
win the elite ultradistance New York 24-Hour Challenge just six months
after her accident and, the following year, set a women's record for the
fastest time across North Carolina, another ultradistance benchmark. "And
my times on the circuits I rode started dropping. I couldn't physiologically
explain the improvement I was seeing."
This was 1988, and while Busby may not have known it at
the time, she was among the pioneers of peak-performance neurofeedback.
"It was totally experimental," says Chartier. "But, athletically
speaking, Cathy was a real success story. For someone who was already
at her level, lifting her higher was pretty damn exciting."
WIND THE clock forward a dozen years. More than 500 individuals
in the U.S. and Canada are now certified neurofeedback practitioners,
according to the Biofeedback Institute of America. To be fair, much of
the research—and the current bulk of its application—in brain-wave
control over the last 30 years has been targeted toward reducing or eradicating
seizures in epileptics, treating attention-deficit disorder, countering
depression, assisting patients who have suffered loss of brain function
after a head injury, and administering other types of therapy. But a handful
of psychologists have continued to focus on neurofeedback's potential
to enhance athletic performance.
Here, in a very small nutshell, is how it works. During
a 24-hour period, your brain oscillates through four general categories
of electrical activity, from sleep to extreme alertness—delta, theta,
alpha, and beta, respectively (see "Altered States," next page).
Throughout the cycle, the brain taps several frequencies at once, with
more dominant patterns rising and falling depending on the activity. The
infamous "zone" that athletes enter when they're at the top
of their game, explains Chartier, is created when a highly desirable combination
of particular frequencies kicks in at just the right time—an "exquisite
chaos" of brain activity that allows both linear problem-solving
and conceptual and spatial awareness to function simultaneously. The trick
is to understand which frequencies need to be turned up or turned down,
since patterns vary from individual to individual, and to strengthen the
athlete's ability to access these frequencies. "We've discovered
that there are certain states of consciousness associated with peak performance,"
says Chartier. "Basically, the zone is definable in EEG terms. And
if we know there is a place that corresponds to improved performance,
we ask, how do you get there?"
In his Raleigh clinic, Chartier annually works with about
half a dozen athletes to achieve that elusive brain-wave blend. It's a
small but growing percentage of his mostly clinical practice, and it illustrates
a trend that's mirrored elsewhere in the country. At the U.S. Olympic
Training Center in Colorado Springs, for example, trainers are now experimenting
with a machine called a Peak Achievement Trainer (PAT), which uses a desktop
computer to track and steer them toward more desirable, performance-enhancing
brain-wave frequencies. In short, while we've got the science behind muscular
and nutritional training wired, psychological training is really just
beginning to blossom. And neurofeedback may be the most exciting athletic
development since weight training.
THE EFFECT OF the mind on physical activity is profound.
When it comes to peak performance, sports psychologists are learning that
during stressful activity or competition, many athletes tend to hyperfocus.
"They think too much," says Vietta Wilson, a professor of kinesiology
and health science at Toronto's York University who has studied the brain-wave
patterns of Olympians and other athletes for more than 20 years. "The
chemistry of exertion changes the speed of decision making. You start
questioning and it takes you off target. Some people can come right back
to what they are supposed to do. Other people start looking at consequences
and tighten up in the muscles." The result: rushing and poor decisions.
Here's where neurofeedback and EEG monitors prove invaluable.
They provide an instrument that objectively measures brain waves and signals
when an athlete reaches a relaxed yet focused state—more alpha waves,
fewer high-frequency beta waves. This is particularly important because
it's virtually impossible to recognize the subtle physiological differences
in various states of relaxation without the appropriate monitoring device.
A fish that's in water, the saying goes, doesn't know it's in water.
This became clear in 1991, when Dan Landers, a professor
of exercise science at Arizona State University, conducted a neurofeedback/peak-performance
study with a group of elite archers (among the few types of athletes who
can pursue their sport with a head full of wires). When one is preparing
to release an arrow, beta waves permeate the brain's left hemisphere.
The mind is chattering away: "Aim the arrow, draw the bow, there's
a plane flying over my head..." Then, just before release, alpha
waves wash over the left hemisphere, stilling the brain and allowing fluid,
focused execution. Landers divided his subjects into three groups: One
received no neurofeedback training; one received neurofeedback training
designed to enhance alpha patterns in the left side of the brain; and
the third group was put through a sham protocol. "Those who got the
correct biofeedback showed significant improvement," says Landers.
"Their shots moved from the outer edge of the nine ring to the inner.
For archers, that's a meaningful change." Those who received no training
improved only slightly, and the group receiving the bogus training got
worse. Comparable studies involving karate, golf putting, and free-throw
shooting have all charted similar results.
Back in 1996, climber Mark Twight was turned on to brain-wave
training by another climbing friend. He soon found himself conducting
his own brain-wave training with a Sportslink, a Walkman-size device that
emits light and sound calibrated to specific brain-wave frequencies. On
a recent trip to Mount McKinley, Twight immersed himself in daily 40-minute
Sportslink sessions while at base camp; he went on to set a speed record
(60 hours round-trip, beating the previous record of seven days) up Czech
Direct, widely believed to be the mountain's most difficult route. "I
hate to use the word 'trick,' " says Twight. "But that's what
I'm doing. When I'm in the mountains, I sometimes have moments of great
doubt. Honestly, when you do the kinds of routes I do, you're more often
defeated psychologically than physically. The [brain-wave] training helps
me turn on confidence and optimism when necessary."
Few neurofeedback experts will tell you that it's possible
to train yourself to automatically enter the zone every time you drive
for a layup or attempt to dyno the crux of a 5.11 climb, but most agree
you can increase your odds of success. Brain-wave training helps individuals
open the aperture of their attention, developing what Les Fehmi, a psychologist
in Princeton, New Jersey, calls attentional flexibility. "It's where
you're able to narrow your focus for an event that demands it," says
Fehmi, who works with athletes on peak performance, "but you don't
live there."
So will your next performance breakthrough be as simple
as sitting in a chair and patching into a machine? Probably not. You'll
need to connect visualization techniques and proper brain-wave frequencies.
Just ask Erik Cook, a springboard diver on the U.S. National Team. In
1999 Cook fractured his back on a practice dive. During his recovery,
he spent several weeks going through dozens of sessions of visualization
with a Peak Achievement Trainer. "When I got back on the board, it
was like I didn't miss a beat," says Cook, now 23. "I've been
injured before and I know my personal timetable. This time it took three
weeks to come back instead of three months."
Twight, by comparison, imagines himself in stressful climbing
situations—say, hanging from ice axes a thousand feet off the deck
and suddenly getting bombarded by rockfall. He then pictures himself reacting
calmly and getting himself out of danger, rather than panicking and making
matters worse. "A fear-arousing situation should be the cue to relaxation,"
he says.
To be sure, most neurofeedback training—and the best—takes
place in clinics or training centers that provide access to both equipment
and expertise. But clinic time comes at a price. Peak-performance training
generally involves ten to 20 50-minute sessions, costing anywhere from
$50 to $150 each. If you visit Chartier, he'll recommend a minimum of
ten sessions at $120 each.
But do-it-yourselfers are proliferating, as is in-home training
equipment (see "Check Your Head," page 132). Among these are
two distinct systems. Twight's Sportslink, to provide an example of one
system, nudges his brain waves toward specific frequencies by exposing
him to preset light and sound programs that help reinforce positive attitude,
help the body relax to recover from a hard workout, and other functions.
The other system centers around EEG monitoring devices that help individuals
recognize certain states of consciousness associated with particular dominant
brain-wave frequencies, thus helping them learn how to control those frequencies.
Exhibit A for this system is the BrainMaster (step aside, Thighmaster),
which is not much bigger than a modem, interfaces with your home computer,
and comes complete with instructional videos.
Yet as sophisticated as these machines are, the next generation
of neurofeedback training is already on the horizon. In April at his clinic,
Chartier plans to introduce his clients to new monitoring hardware and
software that he helped develop that will allow neurofeedback practitioners
to chart multiple brain frequencies simultaneously. "When we can
link frequencies, we'll be able to create an entire performance map,"
says Chartier. "It's like this: Where we've been able to listen to
individual instruments, we'll now be able to listen to the orchestra.
And we'll be able to teach the brain to play the whole symphony."