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Frank Echenhofer received his Ph.D.
in Developmental Psychology from Temple
University in 1985. He has been a clinical
research associate at Temple University
and has been in private practice since 1985.
His specializations, which bridge east-west
psychology, are in the general areas of
eastern and western comparative psychology,
philosophy, and psychophysiology. He has
done research in exceptional and deficit
attention (ADHD, mild brain injury, single-pointed
concentration and visualization meditation),
EEG biofeedback for normalizing the EEG
associated with attention and arousal level
problems, and EEG assisted self-regulation
methods for creativity, meditation facilitation,
imagery self-regulation, and experimental
transpersonal psychology. Frank has conducted
research with Tibetan Buddhist meditators
in India and meditators from the United
States. He has lectured and written articles
on the physiology and phenomenology of meditation,
the integration of developmental and transpersonal
psychologies, comparative biological psychology,
and Eastern psychology.
Clinical
Psychology Program
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