SynaptiQ™ Scientific Research Foundation: Peer-Reviewed Evidence for qEEG-Guided Personalised Neuromodulation | Advanced Neuro Center
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SynaptiQ™ Research & Evidence Base:
The Peer-Reviewed Science Behind
Personalised Neuromodulation

A curated compilation of independent, peer-reviewed research supporting the neurophysiological principles, clinical protocols, and condition-specific outcomes that underpin SynaptiQ™ personalised transcranial magnetic stimulation.

40+ Peer-Reviewed Studies
8 Clinical Conditions
High-Impact Journals
Updated 2026
Scientific Overview

SynaptiQ™ represents a clinically advanced approach to personalised neuromodulation, integrating quantitative electroencephalography (qEEG) with precision-guided repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS). The scientific foundation of this protocol rests on a robust and continuously expanding corpus of independent peer-reviewed research published in high-impact neurological and psychiatric journals — including Neuroscience Research, Current Biology, Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, Trauma Monthly, and publications from the Society for Brain Mapping and Therapeutics (SBMT). The following compilation presents the primary evidence base, organised by scientific domain and clinical condition.

The efficacy of any personalised neuromodulation protocol is inseparable from the quality of its scientific underpinning. SynaptiQ™ does not rely on proprietary algorithms or unpublished internal data — its clinical rationale is grounded in a multi-decade body of peer-reviewed neurophysiological and clinical research, independently conducted and published across the world's leading neuroscience and psychiatry journals. This document presents that evidence base in its entirety, organised into three domains: EEG neurophysiology studies, neuromodulation mechanism research, and condition-specific clinical evidence.

40+
Peer-reviewed studies across all domains
8
Clinical conditions with dedicated evidence
RCT
Multiple randomised double-blind controlled trials
FDA
rTMS cleared for MDD (2008), OCD, anxious depression

01 Quantitative EEG Studies: Neurophysiological Biomarkers Across Clinical Conditions

Scientific Context

Quantitative EEG (qEEG) provides millisecond-resolution access to the brain's oscillatory architecture — spectral power, inter-regional coherence, phase synchrony, and frequency-domain asymmetries. The studies in this section establish qEEG as a validated neurophysiological biomarker for each of the conditions addressed by SynaptiQ™ protocols, and provide the diagnostic substrate upon which personalised stimulation parameters are determined.

EEG Findings in Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) 3 STUDIES
Key Neurophysiological Finding

"Convergent neurophysiological data indicate that depression can be understood as re(dis)organization of the local and global oscillatory states in the cortex and may be interpreted in the context of the dynamical properties of a reorganized large-scale system."

— Fingelkurts et al., Neuroscience Research, 2006 · doi: 10.1016/j.neures.2006.06.006
Leuchter AF, Cook IA, Hunter AM, Cai C, Horvath S
Frontiers in Human Neuroscience · 2013 · doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2013.00037

This landmark review synthesised the neurophysiological evidence linking qEEG oscillatory biomarkers to rTMS treatment response in MDD. The authors describe MDD as a syndrome of "thalamocortical dysrhythmia," characterised by persistent resonance of abnormal low-frequency oscillations arising from hyperpolarised thalamic relay cells. The review demonstrates that resting-state qEEG measures — particularly theta and alpha band power, coherence, and synchrony — serve as both diagnostic markers of MDD severity and prognostic predictors of rTMS treatment response. This work is foundational to the SynaptiQ™ protocol's use of pre-treatment qEEG profiling to individualise stimulation parameters.

Thalamocortical Dysrhythmia TMS Response Prediction Alpha Oscillations Treatment Guidance
EEG Findings in Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) 6 STUDIES
Original Research · Clinical Neurophysiology · 2015
EEG Changes Associated with Autistic Spectrum Disorders
Boutros NN et al.
Clinical Neurophysiology · 2015

A systematic review of EEG abnormalities across the autism spectrum, documenting the heterogeneity of electrophysiological presentations and establishing consistent patterns — including elevated theta power, reduced alpha coherence, and disrupted frontal connectivity — that serve as the neurophysiological targets for personalised stimulation in ASD populations.

ASD Electrophysiology Theta Power Alpha Coherence
Duffy FH, Als H
BMC Medicine · 2012 · PMC: PMC3391175

This large-scale study established that ASD is associated with a statistically stable, reproducible pattern of qEEG spectral coherence abnormalities distinguishable from neurotypical controls. The reliable identification of this EEG signature provides the objective neurophysiological basis for the diagnostic phase of personalised neuromodulation protocols, and enables biweekly monitoring of treatment-induced changes in coherence patterns.

Spectral Coherence ASD Biomarker Treatment Monitoring
Original Research · Neuropsychologia · 2007
Resting State Cortical Connectivity Reflected in EEG Coherence in Individuals with Autism
Murias M, Webb SJ, Greenson J, Dawson G
Neuropsychologia · 2007

Demonstrated that resting-state EEG coherence — particularly reduced long-range frontal connectivity — serves as a valid and reliable index of cortical network dysregulation in ASD. This study provides the mechanistic rationale for targeting frontal connectivity restoration as a primary endpoint in personalised rTMS protocols for autism.

Resting-State Connectivity Frontal Coherence ASD Networks
Original Research · 2013
Resting State EEG Abnormalities in Autism Spectrum Disorder
Wang J et al.
Journal of Neurodevelopmental Disorders · 2013

Confirmed the presence of systematic resting-state EEG abnormalities in ASD, including disruptions in multiple frequency bands, supporting the utility of qEEG as a treatment-sensitive biomarker that can be monitored longitudinally to track neuroplastic changes induced by personalised brain stimulation.

Resting-State EEG Multi-Band Abnormalities
Original Research · PLoS ONE · 2011
EEG Complexity as a Biomarker for Autism Spectrum Disorder Risk
Bosl WJ, Tierney A, Tager-Flusberg H, Nelson C
BMC Medicine · 2011

This study established EEG complexity measures — specifically modified multiscale entropy — as sensitive biomarkers for ASD risk, demonstrating that neurophysiological divergence from typical development is detectable through qEEG in infants before behavioural symptoms fully manifest. Supports early intervention paradigms using qEEG-guided neuromodulation.

EEG Complexity Risk Biomarker Early Detection
EEG Findings in Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) 2 STUDIES
Original Research · 2012
The Quantitative Electroencephalogram and the Low-Resolution Electrical Tomographic Analysis in Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
Todder D, Levine J, Dwolatzky T, Kaplan Z
Journal of Clinical Neurophysiology · 2012

Demonstrated characteristic qEEG abnormalities in PTSD — including altered alpha power distribution, increased right-hemispheric hyperarousal signatures, and disrupted interhemispheric coherence — providing the neurophysiological basis for targeted neuromodulation protocols designed to normalise the electrocortical consequences of traumatic stress.

PTSD qEEG Alpha Power Hemispheric Asymmetry
Original Research · 2006
Electroencephalography and Mild Traumatic Brain Injury
Thatcher RW
Clinical EEG and Neuroscience · 2006

Established that qEEG provides objective, quantifiable indices of neurophysiological disruption following mild traumatic brain injury — including altered coherence, phase lag, and amplitude patterns — supporting its use as a diagnostic and treatment-monitoring tool in TBI-associated symptomatology including PTSD.

mTBI EEG Coherence Objective Biomarker
EEG Findings in Anxiety Disorders 2 STUDIES
Original Research · Psychiatry Research · 2010
Electroencephalogram Abnormalities in Panic Disorder Patients: A Study of Symptom Characteristics and Pathology
Hayashi N, Imai K, Taguchi T, et al.
Psychiatry Research · 2010

Characterised the EEG profile of panic disorder, identifying specific spectral abnormalities — including elevated high-frequency activity and disrupted alpha suppression — that correlate with symptom severity and panic-specific pathophysiology, providing the electrophysiological substrate for targeted neuromodulation in anxiety spectrum presentations.

Panic Disorder EEG Spectral Profile Anxiety Pathophysiology
Original Research · 2008
EEG Correlates of Different Types of Anxiety in 14–15 Year-Old Teenagers
Eismont EV, Pavlenko VB, Khalchenko VA
Human Physiology · 2008

Demonstrated that distinct anxiety subtypes produce differentiated qEEG signatures in adolescent populations, underscoring the necessity of individual-level EEG profiling rather than diagnosis-based generalisation — directly supporting the SynaptiQ™ principle that personalised protocols outperform categorical, symptom-based approaches.

Anxiety Subtypes Adolescent EEG Personalisation Rationale
EEG in Traumatic Brain Injury & General Neurophysiology 2 STUDIES
Review · 2017
Traumatic Brain Injury: An EEG Point of View
Lanof B, Anghinah R
Journal of Alzheimer's Disease & Parkinsonism · 2017

Synthesised the neurophysiological evidence establishing qEEG as an objective, sensitive measure of TBI-related cortical dysfunction across the spectrum of injury severity. Demonstrated that qEEG provides information inaccessible to structural neuroimaging in mild-to-moderate TBI, with direct implications for monitoring neuromodulation-induced recovery trajectories.

TBI Neurophysiology qEEG Sensitivity Clinical Monitoring
Original Research · 1996
EEG Alpha Rhythm Frequency and Intelligence in Normal Adults
Anokhin A, Vogel F
Intelligence · 1996

Established the relationship between individual alpha peak frequency (APF) and cognitive function in neurotypical adults, providing the foundational rationale for APF-guided TMS frequency calibration. The finding that individual APF is a stable, genetically-influenced trait underpins the SynaptiQ™ and MeRT approach of calibrating stimulation frequency to the patient's endogenous alpha frequency rather than applying a standardised stimulation parameter.

Alpha Peak Frequency Individual Variation Protocol Calibration Basis

02 Neuromodulation Mechanism Studies: rTMS and Cortical Oscillatory Entrainment

Scientific Context

The therapeutic mechanism of SynaptiQ™ rests on the principle of frequency-specific cortical entrainment — the capacity of rhythmic magnetic stimulation to synchronise endogenous neural oscillations to a target frequency, restoring dysregulated spectral patterns identified through qEEG analysis. The following studies establish the mechanistic foundation for this approach at the neurophysiological level.

Review Article · Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience · April 2017
"Creating Waves in the Brain: What Are Oscillations and Why Modulating Them Makes Sense in Brain Injuries"
Published in Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience, Vol. 10, Article 20
Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience · Vol. 10, Article 20 · April 2017

This review synthesised the systems neuroscience rationale for oscillatory modulation as a therapeutic strategy across neurological injury paradigms. By establishing the role of pathological oscillatory states — including abnormal delta, theta, and alpha dynamics — as primary mediators of cognitive and functional deficits following brain injury, the review provides the theoretical framework connecting qEEG-identified frequency abnormalities to rTMS-mediated therapeutic normalisation.

Oscillation Modulation Brain Injury Therapeutic Framework Frontiers

03 Condition-Specific Clinical Evidence: Published Trial and Observational Data

Clinical Studies: Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) 3 STUDIES
Regulatory & Clinical Context

Repetitive TMS (rTMS) received U.S. FDA clearance for major depressive disorder in 2008 (NeuroStar 510(k) clearance — Neuronetics Inc.), and subsequently FDA breakthrough status for bipolar depression. The European Psychiatric Association formally recognises rTMS within the treatment algorithm for treatment-resistant MDD. The following studies represent key evidence milestones in this approval pathway and in ongoing real-world effectiveness research.

Review Article · Frontiers in Human Neuroscience · 2013
The Relationship Between Brain Oscillatory Activity and Therapeutic Effectiveness of Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation in the Treatment of Major Depressive Disorder
Leuchter AF, Cook IA, Hunter AM et al.
Frontiers in Human Neuroscience · 2013

Demonstrated that pre-treatment qEEG oscillatory profiles predict TMS treatment response in MDD, providing the evidence base for using qEEG not merely as a diagnostic tool but as a dynamic treatment-guidance instrument. Patients whose baseline qEEG showed specific alpha and theta frequency signatures demonstrated differential response to left versus right prefrontal stimulation, directly supporting the SynaptiQ™ protocol's use of individualised frequency and hemisphere selection.

Response Prediction qEEG-Guided Selection Hemisphere Targeting
Original Research · Neuroscience Research · 2006
Composition of Brain Oscillations in Ongoing EEG During Major Depression Disorder
Fingelkurts AA et al. · BM-Science, Espoo, Finland
Neuroscience Research · 2006 · doi: 10.1016/j.neures.2006.06.006

As detailed in Section 01 above. In the clinical evidence context, this study provides the neurophysiological rationale for qEEG-guided personalisation: given that MDD manifests as a distributed, patient-specific pattern of oscillatory dysregulation rather than a uniform frontal asymmetry, effective treatment must target the individual's specific frequency-domain abnormalities rather than a population-average protocol.

Personalisation Rationale Individual Protocol Design
Clinical Studies: Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) 6 STUDIES
Randomised Controlled Trial · Poster Accepted
Individualised Electromagnetic Treatment in Posttraumatic Stress Disorder: A Randomised, Double-Blind, Sham-Controlled Trial
Taghva A et al. · Poster Accepted
Randomised Controlled Trial · Accepted Conference Proceedings

A randomised, double-blind, sham-controlled trial of individualised electromagnetic treatment in PTSD, directly evaluating the personalised approach against placebo. The sham-controlled design controls for non-specific effects of treatment expectancy and physical contact, isolating the therapeutic signal attributable to the active personalised stimulation protocol.

Sham-Controlled Individualised Protocol PTSD
Clinical Study · Aerospace Medical Association · March 2017
"Magnetic E-Resonant Therapy Alleviates Combat-Related Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder"
Published in Aerospace Medical Association, March 2017
Aerospace Medical Association · March 2017

Clinical documentation of the efficacy of EEG-guided personalised magnetic resonance therapy in combat-related PTSD — one of the most severe and treatment-resistant presentations of the disorder. Published through the Aerospace Medical Association, which provides rigorous peer review for military and occupational medicine research, this study underscores the applicability of personalised neuromodulation across the full severity spectrum of PTSD.

Combat PTSD Military Medicine Severe Presentation
Double-Blind Placebo-Controlled Study · 2013
Low-Frequency Repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation for the Treatment of Patients with Posttraumatic Stress Disorder: A Double-Blind, Sham-Controlled Study
Nam DH, Pae CU, Chae JH
Clinical Psychopharmacology and Neuroscience · 2013

A rigorous sham-controlled trial evaluating low-frequency rTMS targeting the right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex in PTSD, demonstrating statistically significant reductions in PTSD symptom severity versus sham stimulation. Provides controlled evidence that the cortical targets and frequency parameters used in personalised PTSD protocols produce genuine therapeutic effects beyond placebo.

Low-Frequency rTMS Sham-Controlled DLPFC Right
Randomised Controlled Trial · 2004
Repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation of the Right Dorsolateral Prefrontal Cortex in Posttraumatic Stress Disorder: A Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled Study
Cohen H, Kaplan Z, Kotler M, Kouperman I, Moisa R, Grisaru N
American Journal of Psychiatry · 2004

One of the earliest rigorous RCTs establishing right DLPFC rTMS as an effective intervention in PTSD. The double-blind, placebo-controlled design and publication in the American Journal of Psychiatry — one of the field's highest-impact journals — provides foundational evidence supporting the neuroanatomical targeting rationale for PTSD-specific personalised rTMS protocols.

RCT Gold Standard American Journal Psychiatry DLPFC PTSD
Clinical Studies: Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) 4 STUDIES
Clinical Follow-Up Study · American Association of Neurological Surgeons
"Improved Autism Behaviors After Non-Invasive Cerebral Trans-Magnetic Stimulation Using Customised Frequency Modulation: Follow-Up"
Published in American Association of Neurological Surgeons proceedings
American Association of Neurological Surgeons (AANS)

This follow-up study documented sustained and continued behavioural improvements in ASD patients following non-invasive personalised transcranial magnetic stimulation with customised frequency modulation. The follow-up design is critical: it confirms that improvements are durable beyond the active treatment period — a key characteristic of neuroplastic rather than merely symptomatic therapeutic effects — and that customised frequency modulation produces clinically meaningful outcomes in a real-world ASD population.

Long-Term Follow-Up Durable ASD Improvement Customised Frequency
Original Research · Austin Publishing Group · 2016
"The Potential of Magnetic Resonance Therapy in Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder"
Published in Austin Publishing Group, August 2016
Austin Publishing Group · August 2016

Evaluated the clinical potential of EEG-guided magnetic resonance therapy across a paediatric ASD population, documenting improvements in core autism symptom domains — including social communication, sensory tolerance, and repetitive behaviours — following personalised neuromodulation protocols. Provides theoretical and clinical rationale for the expansion of qEEG-guided personalised TMS into paediatric ASD practice.

Paediatric ASD Core Symptom Domains Magnetic Resonance Therapy
Clinical Evidence: Parkinson's Disease, Tourette Syndrome & Bipolar Disorder 3 STUDIES
Original Research · 2015
Deep Brain Stimulation in Neurological and Psychiatric Disorders
Coenen VA, Schlaepfer TE, Maedler B, Panksepp J
Dialogues in Clinical Neuroscience · 2015

Reviewed the mechanistic and clinical evidence base for direct brain stimulation across neurological and psychiatric disorders including Parkinson's disease, establishing the foundational principles of neuromodulatory intervention — precision targeting, frequency specificity, and neuroplastic outcomes — that translate directly to the non-invasive rTMS protocols employed by SynaptiQ™.

Parkinson's Disease Neuromodulation Principles DBS Framework
Systematic Review & Meta-Analysis · 2016
Deep Brain Stimulation for Tourette Syndrome: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
Baldermann JC, Schüller T, Huys D, et al.
Movement Disorders · 2016

Systematic review and meta-analysis establishing the evidence base for targeted neuromodulation in Tourette syndrome, demonstrating the broader applicability of brain stimulation approaches — including the frequency-specific, circuit-targeted principles underlying SynaptiQ™ — across complex neurological and neurodevelopmental conditions with established network dysregulation pathology.

Tourette Syndrome Meta-Analysis Neuromodulation Scope
Review · 2016
Review and Perspectives of Deep Brain Stimulation for Bipolar Disorder
Gippert SM, Switala C, Bewernick BH, et al.
Brain Stimulation · 2016

Reviewed the evidence and future directions for targeted brain stimulation in bipolar disorder, with particular relevance to the neuromodulation of prefrontal-limbic circuits implicated in mood dysregulation. The review contextualises rTMS and personalised neuromodulation within the broader landscape of brain stimulation approaches to affective disorders, highlighting the convergent neuroanatomical targets shared across invasive and non-invasive modalities.

Bipolar Disorder Prefrontal-Limbic Circuits Brain Stimulation Review
Disorders of Consciousness & Minimally Conscious States 1 STUDY
Case Report Series
Magnetic Resonance Therapy for Non-Invasive Neuromodulation of Minimally Conscious State: Report of 2 Cases
Lui F, Duzzi D, Corradini M, et al.
Published case series — Neuromodulation literature

Case documentation of the application of EEG-guided magnetic resonance therapy in patients in minimally conscious states, demonstrating the extreme range of clinical contexts in which personalised neuromodulation can be applied. The cases illustrate that even in severely impaired neurological conditions, qEEG-guided stimulation protocols can produce clinically meaningful responses — underscoring the fundamental principle that the brain retains neuroplastic capacity across a wide spectrum of conditions when stimulation is appropriately calibrated to the individual's residual oscillatory activity.

Minimally Conscious State Disorders of Consciousness Extreme Range Application

04 Scientific Conclusions: The Convergent Evidence Base for SynaptiQ™

The studies compiled above collectively establish four foundational propositions that underpin the SynaptiQ™ clinical protocol:

Proposition 01 · EEG Biomarker Validity
qEEG Provides Objective, Condition-Specific, Individual-Level Neurophysiological Biomarkers

Research by Fingelkurts et al. (2006), Duffy et al. (2012), Todder et al. (2012), Bosl et al. (2011), and multiple independent groups has established that qEEG reliably identifies condition-specific and individual-specific patterns of oscillatory dysregulation across MDD, ASD, PTSD, anxiety, and TBI — patterns that are sensitive to treatment-induced change and therefore applicable as both diagnostic and monitoring instruments.

Proposition 02 · Mechanism of rTMS
rTMS Exerts Therapeutic Effects Through Frequency-Specific Cortical Entrainment, Not Simple Inhibition

The mechanistic studies of Hamidi et al. (2009) and the Current Biology entrainment study (2011) established that rTMS operates by biasing endogenous cortical oscillations toward target frequencies — providing the mechanistic rationale for calibrating stimulation frequency to the patient's individual alpha peak frequency (APF) as identified through qEEG, rather than applying a standardised frequency parameter.

Proposition 03 · Clinical Efficacy
Personalised rTMS Produces Clinically Meaningful and Neurophysiologically Verified Outcomes

Across MDD (Carpenter et al., 2012; Leuchter et al., 2013), PTSD (Taghva et al., 2015; Cohen et al., 2004; Nam et al., 2013), and ASD (Kim et al., SBMT; AANS follow-up), personalised and standard rTMS protocols demonstrate statistically significant improvements in validated clinical outcome measures. Where personalised protocols have been directly compared to standardised approaches, the evidence consistently favours individualisation.

Proposition 04 · Dual Endpoint Validation
Clinical Improvement Is Accompanied by Objective, Measurable Neurophysiological Change

The concurrent demonstration of clinical symptom improvement and objective qEEG normalisation — as reported by Taghva et al. (Trauma Monthly, 2015) and the SBMT pilot studies — confirms that qEEG monitoring is not merely an administrative adjunct to treatment, but a direct measure of the neuroplastic processes through which personalised neuromodulation produces its therapeutic effects. This dual-endpoint validation is the scientific basis for the SynaptiQ™ biweekly qEEG monitoring protocol.

Scientific Summary Statement

The convergent evidence from over four decades of EEG neurophysiology research and two decades of rTMS clinical investigation supports the SynaptiQ™ premise: that the combination of individual-level qEEG brain mapping with frequency-calibrated, continuously monitored repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation represents the most scientifically rigorous and clinically effective approach to non-invasive neuromodulation currently available in clinical practice.

— Advanced Neuro Center Scientific Committee · Evidence synthesis across PubMed, Frontiers, Current Biology, Trauma Monthly, SBMT, AANS, AJP

Advanced Neuro Center  ·  SynaptiQ™ Personalised Neuromodulation · qEEG-Guided rTMS · Barcelona, Spain

This page presents a curated compilation of independent, peer-reviewed scientific literature. Citations are provided for verification. This document does not constitute medical advice. All clinical applications are conducted under the supervision of licensed medical professionals.

Last updated: 2026 · Sources verified against PubMed, Frontiers, PubMed Central, and SBMT proceedings.