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Neurotune | Mental health service



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Neurotune

Phone: +61 407 423 180



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23.01.2022 BRAIN HACKS #1 - NEVER STOP PLAYING Playing is an essential activity of early childhood as it contributes to the cognitive social and emotional development of children. Parents directly affect the behaviour of their young children when they engage their children in play... YOU DON'T STOP PLAYING BECAUSE YOU GROW OLD YOU GROW OLD BECAUSE YOU STOP PLAYING. #brainhack #neurotune #play



22.01.2022 One of our inspirational friends who courageously embraces the world and inspires many

21.01.2022 It’s estimated we have 100 billion nerve cells in the brain. And each nerve cell is connected to other nerve cells, not in a one-to-one connection, but up to 10,000 individual connections between cells. Which means you have more connection in your skull than there are stars in the Universe.

20.01.2022 How chronic stress can affect the brain's size, structure, and how it functions:



03.01.2022 Neurotune is a private brain-based therapy practice in Perth specialising in Neurofeedback Brain Training. Neurofeedback is a safe, natural, non-invasive, drug-free, effective method grounded in decades of evidence-based clinical research that allows the brain to restore healthy mental processes and achieve life changing results. Children, adolescents, and adults attend Neurotune for a variety of issues ranging from birth trauma, anxiety, depression, post-traumatic stress dis...order, stress-related problems, and insomnia or interrupted sleep patterns, behavior disorders, attention deficits, autism, ongoing developmental delays, acquired brain injuries, as well as those with age-related cognitive loss, may find neurofeedback helpful. Neurofeedback may also be used as an adjunct intervention with other forms of therapy.

01.01.2022 BRAIN HACKS #2 - MEDITATION FOR THE BRAIN The longer you make meditation a consistent part of your day, the more positive effects meditation has on the brain. In a 2013 Psychology Today article, Dr. Rebecca Gladding asserts that regular meditation loosens the neural pathways between the brain’s fear center and what Gladding refers to as the Me Center. That’s the spot in the brain which constantly reflects back to our conscious self. When meditation loosens these neural pathways they decrease feelings of fear and anxiety. In addition, new neural pathways, including more positive empathetic responses, begin to form.

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