Interactive comparison
Drag the slider left and right to reveal the baseline (left) and follow-up (right) qEEG topographic patterns. Warmer colors indicate elevated activity vs. age-matched norms; cooler colors indicate suppressed activity.
Illustrative composite based on typical pre/post patterns. Not an individual patient. Your child's maps are reviewed privately with your clinician.
What 'normalized' looks like, in practice
In the baseline image, hot spots cluster over frontal and temporal regions — patterns commonly associated with regulation, attention, and communication difficulty. In the follow-up image, those hot spots are smaller and the overall map sits closer to age-typical ranges. That's the kind of change we're tracking — not visual aesthetics, but movement toward typical network activity.
What this does and does not prove
A normalized follow-up qEEG is strong objective evidence that the brain has changed. It does not — on its own — prove that life is better. That's why we pair it with parent-reported measures and clinician observation across the course. See how those three streams converge on the Progress Tracking page.
Ready to see your child's baseline brain map?
Verify your insurance benefits or request a consultation — most families hear back within one business day.
Frequently asked questions
›Are these real patients?
These are illustrative composites built from typical pre/post patterns. Individual patient maps are reviewed privately. We can share de-identified case examples during your consultation.
›What do the colors mean?
Warmer colors (red/orange) indicate elevated activity vs. age-matched norms; cooler colors (blue) indicate suppressed activity. A 'normalized' map shows activity closer to age-typical ranges.
›Does every patient see this kind of change?
No. Some show stronger normalization than others; some need a re-mapped second protocol. The point of repeating the qEEG is to see — not to assume.
›How long between the before and after maps?
Typically 10–12 weeks — the standard course length. Some plans run shorter or longer based on tolerance and response.
