About this Research Topic
The goal of this Research Topic is to determine a best set of practices for the field of Digital Health Neuroscience. Namely, to describe how past results from neuroscience have influenced current Digital Health interventions to distinguish between Digital Health Neuroscience and previously existing techniques (e.g., neurofeedback) or fields (for example, how Digital Health Neuroscience differs from e-Health neurology) and to present new research results with Neuroscience-based Digital health interventions. This Research Topic will address several questions, including, how Digital Health will impact a new generation of Neuroscientists and Neurologists,, how a unified brain theory would improve Digital Health, how far from that are we, as well as to discuss what the benefits and perils of generalized access to information and their effects in Do-It-Yourself Digital Health Neuroscience are.By gathering these perspectives and findings in this Topic , we aim to achieve a more complete perspective on the current state of Digital Health Neuroscience, its origins, as well as possible routes for the future.
As such, we welcome contributions that aim to gather new and important results,as well as multiple perspectives, from multiple viewpoints, on the field of Digital Health Neuroscience, that include, but are not limited to, themes that address:
- Contributions of neuroscience (molecular, theoretical, systems, cognitive, Brain-machine interfaces etc.) to Digital Health
- Distinction between Digital Health Neuroscience and other related fields
- Presentation of Digital Health Neuroscience based interventions
- How Digital Health will contribute to a new generation of Neuroscientists
- How/if a unified brain theory could improve Digital Health
Keywords: Digital Health, Neuroscience, Neuroengineering, Digital Therapeutics, Brain-Machine Interfaces, Molecular Neuroscience
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.