|
Clair Goldberg, Psy.D.
Clair Goldberg, Psy.D., is a licensed psychologist with over two decades of experience specializing in trauma, anxiety, and complex emotional challenges. Her clinical approach integrates advanced neurophysiological methods, including Attuned Neurofeedback and Deep Brain Reorienting (DBR), to support healing from profound shock, terror, and developmental trauma. She works at the forefront of trauma treatment, collaborating closely with internationally recognized leaders including Dr. Frank Corrigan, Sebern Fisher, Dr. Ruth Lanius and Mirjana Askovic to advance the integration of neurofeedback and DBR for deep, brainstem-level trauma resolution. Her work is grounded in the belief that healing is always possible and that early adversity profoundly shapes emotional and physiological functioning. Clair is the former director of the Student Counseling Center at the Jewish Theological Seminary in New York City, where she supported students navigating complex identity, cultural, and emotional challenges. Clair utilizes the arousal model of neurofeedback, 4-channel multivariate coherence training, and 32-channel QEEG brain mapping to treat developmental and complex trauma. She is board certified in neurofeedback, a DBR Level 3 practitioner and lead assistant, and she is certified in neuromeditation (Level 2). She co-developed the Attuned Neurofeedback Training Program, a clinician training model that emphasizes the importance of therapeutic attunement in neurofeedback practice. She currently leads its expansion through a remote neurofeedback system to increase accessibility and flexibility for both clinicians and clients. Clair was also part of the early group introducing neurofeedback to the Plum Village Buddhist community founded by Thich Nhat Hanh. A sought-after educator and presenter, Clair teaches nationally and internationally on the neurophysiology of trauma, the integration of neurofeedback and DBR and the importance of therapeutic presence in healing. She regularly trains clinicians to combine these modalities to support deeper, brainstem-level resolution of trauma. |