Brainspotting vs EMDR
A side-by-side comparison: mechanism, evidence, the conditions each treats, philosophical roots, and where they actually disagree clinically.
At a glance
Brainspotting
- Tradition
- Trauma-Focused
- Founder
- David Grand (2003)
- Evidence
- RCT-supported
- Focus
- Processing + Somatic
- Format
- Individual
- Duration
- Short-medium
EMDR
- Tradition
- Trauma-Focused
- Founder
- Francine Shapiro (1989)
- Evidence
- Guideline-recommended
- Focus
- Processing
- Format
- Individual
- Duration
- Short-medium
How they work
Brainspotting
Core mechanism: Focused eye position accesses subcortical processing of trauma capsules; therapist attunement supports activation and discharge
Ontology: Trauma stored subcortically in body/brain; accessed through visual field-somatic connection
EMDR
Core mechanism: Bilateral stimulation during trauma memory processing facilitates adaptive information processing and memory reconsolidation (proposed)
Ontology: Unprocessed trauma memories stored dysfunctionally with original affect, sensation, and cognition
Conditions treated
4 shared · 0 Brainspotting-only · 4 EMDR-only
Both treat
Only EMDR
What each assumes — and misses
Brainspotting
Philosophical roots: Merleau-Ponty (body-subject, perception); Levine (somatic trauma); Damasio (somatic marker hypothesis); Grand (subcortical processing thesis)
Blind spots: Very limited controlled research; proposed mechanisms largely speculative; training lacks standardization compared to EMDR
Therapeutic voice: Just notice where your eyes naturally want to go when you hold that feeling. Stay there.
EMDR
Philosophical roots: Merleau-Ponty (body holds memory); Bion (processing/containment); Pavlov (orienting response); Shapiro (adaptive information processing — pragmatic, not philosophically derived)
Blind spots: Mechanism debate unresolved; protocol fidelity varies; may be applied to conditions beyond its evidence base
Therapeutic voice: Bring up the image and the negative belief. Notice what you feel in your body. Now follow my fingers.
Choosing between them
Brainspotting and EMDR both sit within the Trauma-Focused tradition — they share a worldview about what suffering is and how change happens. Differences are more often about technique and emphasis than about underlying theory.
For deeper coverage: see the full Brainspotting and EMDR pages, or use the interactive comparison tool to add more modalities to this comparison.