Frontiers in Human Neuroscience (Nov 2024)

Olfactory neurofeedback: current state and possibilities for further development

  • Ivan Ninenko,
  • Ivan Ninenko,
  • Alexandra Medvedeva,
  • Victoria L. Efimova,
  • Daria F. Kleeva,
  • Daria F. Kleeva,
  • Daria F. Kleeva,
  • Marina Morozova,
  • Mikhail A. Lebedev,
  • Mikhail A. Lebedev

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fnhum.2024.1419552
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18

Abstract

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This perspective considers the novel concept of olfactory neurofeedback (O-NFB) within the framework of brain-computer interfaces (BCIs), where olfactory stimuli are integrated in various BCI control loops. In particular, electroencephalography (EEG)-based O-NFB systems are capable of incorporating different components of complex olfactory processing – from simple discrimination tasks to using olfactory stimuli for rehabilitation of neurological disorders. In our own work, EEG theta and alpha rhythms were probed as control variables for O-NFB. Additionaly, we developed an olfactory-based instructed-delay task. We suggest that the unique functions of olfaction offer numerous medical and consumer applications where O-NFB is combined with sensory inputs of other modalities within a BCI framework to engage brain plasticity. We discuss the ways O-NFB could be implemented, including the integration of different types of olfactory displays in the experiment set-up and EEG features to be utilized. We emphasize the importance of synchronizing O-NFB with respiratory rhythms, which are known to influence EEG patterns and cognitive processing. Overall, we expect that O-NFB systems will contribute to both practical applications in the clinical world and the basic neuroscience of olfaction.

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