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Journal articles on the topic 'Brainwave entrainment'

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1

Karuppathal, E., R. Kalpana, and A. V. Srinivasan. "Brainwave entrainment through external sensory stimulus: a therapy for insomnia." International Journal of Medical Engineering and Informatics 13, no. 4 (2021): 323. http://dx.doi.org/10.1504/ijmei.2021.115962.

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2

Srinivasan, A. V., E. Karuppathal, and R. Kalpana. "Brainwave entrainment through external sensory stimulus: a therapy for insomnia." International Journal of Medical Engineering and Informatics 13, no. 4 (2021): 323. http://dx.doi.org/10.1504/ijmei.2021.10037429.

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3

Basu, Sandhya, and Bidisha Banerjee. "Prospect of Brainwave Entrainment to Promote Well-Being in Individuals: A Brief Review." Psychological Studies 65, no. 3 (August 3, 2020): 296–306. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12646-020-00555-x.

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4

Schmid, Werner, Peter Marhofer, Philipp Opfermann, Markus Zadrazil, Oliver Kimberger, Lydia Triffterer, Daniela Marhofer, and Wolfgang Klug. "Brainwave entrainment to minimise sedative drug doses in paediatric surgery: a randomised controlled trial." British Journal of Anaesthesia 125, no. 3 (September 2020): 330–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bja.2020.05.050.

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5

Schmid, Werner, Peter Marhofer, and Wolfgang Klug. "Brainwave entrainment to minimise sedative drug doses in paediatric surgery. Response to Br J Anaesth 2020." British Journal of Anaesthesia 126, no. 1 (January 2021): e13. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bja.2020.09.034.

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6

Abeln, Vera, Jens Kleinert, Heiko K. Strüder, and Stefan Schneider. "Brainwave entrainment for better sleep and post-sleep state of young elite soccer players – A pilot study." European Journal of Sport Science 14, no. 5 (July 18, 2013): 393–402. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17461391.2013.819384.

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7

First, David. "The Music of the Sphere: An Investigation into Asymptotic Harmonics, Brainwave Entrainment and the Earth as a Giant Bell." Leonardo Music Journal 13 (December 2003): 31–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/096112104322750755.

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The author discusses a conceptual framework for the organization and performance of music that has its basis in the frequency relationships of the Schumann Resonances and in the principle of binaural beats. He describes the steps he took in conceiving the project, the technical issues involved in realizing the goal of live data transmissions from a remote location and the creation of the three-dimensional overtone series that is the project's theoretical centerpiece. He also lays out his philosophy of improvisation and treads lightly into the curious gray areas where science mutates into leaps of faith.
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8

Locke, Helen N., Joanna Brooks, Laura J. Arendsen, Nikhil Kurian Jacob, Alex Casson, Anthony KP Jones, and Manoj Sivan. "Acceptability and usability of smartphone-based brainwave entrainment technology used by individuals with chronic pain in a home setting." British Journal of Pain 14, no. 3 (February 21, 2020): 161–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2049463720908798.

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Background: Brainwave entrainment (BWE) using rhythmic visual or auditory stimulation has many potential clinical applications, including the management of chronic pain, where there is a pressing need for novel, safe and effective treatments. The aim of this study was to gain qualitative feedback on the acceptability and usability of a novel BWE smartphone application, to ensure it meets the needs and wishes of end users. Methods: Fifteen participants with chronic pain used the application at home for 4 weeks. Semi-structured telephone interviews were then carried out. A template analysis approach was used to interpret the findings, with an initial coding template structured around the constructs of a theoretical framework for assessing acceptability of healthcare interventions. Structured data analysis generated a final modified coding structure, capturing themes generated across participants’ accounts. Results: The four main themes were ‘approach to trying out the app: affective attitude and ethicality’, ‘perceived effectiveness’, ‘opportunity costs and burden’ and ‘intervention coherence and self-efficacy’. All participants were willing to engage with the technology and welcomed it as an alternative approach to medications. Participants appreciated the simplicity of design and the ability to choose between visual or auditory stimulation. All the participants felt confident in using the application. Conclusion: The findings demonstrate preliminary support for the acceptability and usability of the BWE application. This is the first qualitative study of BWE to systematically assess these issues.
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9

Silk, Anne. "The Physics of Belief and the Beautiful Brain." Culture and Dialogue 4, no. 1 (July 22, 2016): 113–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/24683949-12340006.

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The interplay between the human brain and the environment is both dynamic and mysterious. For millennia phenomena have been experienced and observed by our ancestors of all cultures. But in the present Anthropocene age for human beings, many scientists still dismiss phenomena as “anecdotal” and not worthy of study. Beware the reductive power of science and research – good science advances on the wings of hypotheses. Genetics has loaded the gun but our environment pulls the trigger. There are no unnatural or supernatural phenomena – there are only very large gaps in our knowledge of what is natural. Thus the many bountiful phenomena which are covered in five domains of this paper have natural explanations – in physics and geophysics – in the slow brainwaves of human beings capable of entrainment – the waves of Natural systems – in action at a distance – in the piezo-electric signals generated by the crystals surrounding the pineal gland and our dna – itself a Fractal antenna. As the Roman Senator Seneca wrote “The language of truth is simple.”
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10

Zhuang, Tianbao, Hong Zhao, and Zheng Tang. "A Study of Brainwave Entrainment Based on EEG Brain Dynamics." Computer and Information Science 2, no. 2 (April 20, 2009). http://dx.doi.org/10.5539/cis.v2n2p80.

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11

Frohlich, Flavio, Justin Riddle, Gesar Ugen, and Friedrich Lersch. "Brainwave entrainment for the treatment of chronic pain: comment on Br J Pain 2020; 14: 161–70." British Journal of Pain, March 2, 2021, 204946372199461. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2049463721994614.

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12

Argento, Emanuele, George Papagiannakis, Eva Baka, Michail Maniadakis, Panos Trahanias, Michael Sfakianakis, and Ioannis Nestoros. "Augmented Cognition via Brainwave Entrainment in Virtual Reality: An Open, Integrated Brain Augmentation in a Neuroscience System Approach." Augmented Human Research 2, no. 1 (February 28, 2017). http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s41133-017-0005-3.

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13

Lyubomir, Aftanas, Miroshnikova Polina, Morozova Natalya, Yarosh Serguey, Gilinskaya Olga, and Khazankin Grigory. "Audio-visual-tactile brainwave entrainment decreases night arterial blood pressure in patients with uncontrolled essential hypertension: placebo controlled study." Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 10 (2016). http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/conf.fnhum.2016.220.00063.

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14

O'Neill, Christopher, and Bjorn Nansen. "Sleep mode: Mobile apps and the optimisation of sleep-wake rhythms." First Monday, June 1, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.5210/fm.v24i6.9574.

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This article contributes to the critical analysis of sleep and its technological mediation by analysing how sleep is modulated through mobile applications. Drawing on an analysis of the features in the most popular sleep apps in the Apple App store, this paper investigates the dominant types of sleep apps available for everyday use. We analyse how their functions implicate sleeping bodies within new patterns of management and optimisation. We show how sleep apps remediate the monitoring technologies of the sleep science lab to make claims of accuracy and efficacy. However, the analysis also reveals how sleep apps go beyond simply monitoring sleep patterns by directly intervening in and mediating sleep-wake rhythms. This occurs through two key acoustic features common within sleep apps — ‘smart wake up’ alarms and ‘brainwave entrainment’ sound frequencies. We show how these features operate to organise transitions between waking and sleeping states. In doing so, we argue that these functions draw on histories or genealogies of both acoustic media and sleep science in the attempt to optimise the practices and rhythms associated with sleeping bodies.
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15

., Luki Masriansyah. "PENGARUH TERAPI BRAINWAVE ENTRAINMENT DENGAN STIMULASI BINAURAL BEATS AUDIOTORY TERHADAP NYERI PADA LANSIA DENGAN GOUT ARTHRITIS DI WILAYAH KERJA PUSKESMAS ALIANYANG KOTA PONTIANAK." Tanjungpura Journal of Nursing Practice and Education 2, no. 1 (October 17, 2019). http://dx.doi.org/10.26418/tjnpe.v2i1.37098.

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Latar belakang : Gout Arthritis(GA) merupakan gangguan metabolik yangditandai dengan peningkatan kadar asam urat dalam darah (hiperurisemia) yangdimanifestasikan dengan nyeri. Nyeri mengganggu kemampuan lanjut usia(lansia) untuk beristirahat, konsentrasi, dan kegiatan yang biasa dilakukansehingga dapat menurunkan aktivitas dan produktivitas lansia. Terapi BrainwaveEntrainment(BWE) dengan stimulasi Binaural Beats Audiotory(BBA) dapatdiberikan untuk mengatasi nyeri.Tujuan : Mengetahui pengaruh terapi BWE dengan stimulasi BBA terhadap nyeripada lansia dengan GA di wilayah kerja Puskesmas Alianyang Kota Pontianak.Metode : Penelitian kuantitatif menggunakan desain Quasi Experiment Pre andPost Test Nonequivalent Control Group Design dengan teknik NonprobabilitySampling yaitu Purposive Sampling. Jumlah sampel 48 responden yang dibagi kedalam dua kelompok, yaitu kelompok intervensi dan kelompok kontrol. Analisadata menggunakan uji Wilcoxon dan uji Mann-Whitney.Hasil : Karakteristik responden berdasarkan jenis kelamin penderita GAterbanyak adalah perempuan (62,5%), dengan usia pada lansia 60-74 tahun(elderly age) (58,3%), yang diikuti tingkat pendidikan SMP (39,6%) dandidominasi oleh pekerjaan IRT (35,4%). Analisa Bivariat Wilcoxon padakelompok intervensi diperoleh nilai p value 0,001 dan pada kelompok kontrol pvalue 0,157. Hasil uji Mann-Whitney didapatkan hasil p value 0,001.Kesimpulan : Terjadi pengaruh setelah dilakukan terapi BWE dengan stimulasiBBA terhadap nyeri pada lansia dengan GA.Kata Kunci : Intensitas Nyeri, Lansia, Gout Arthritis, Brainwave Entrainment
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16

Engelbregt, Hessel, Marinda Barmentlo, Daniel Keeser, Oliver Pogarell, and Jan Berend Deijen. "Effects of binaural and monaural beat stimulation on attention and EEG." Experimental Brain Research, July 10, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00221-021-06155-z.

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AbstractNowadays a popular technique to improve mood and cognition is auditory beat stimulation (ABS), which is thought to induce a frequency-following response of brainwaves. The main types of ABS are monaural beats (MB) and binaural beats (BB). BB involves the presentation of a specific frequency to one ear and another frequency to the other ear which may induce neural entrainment. A difference between the frequencies of 40 Hz is assumed to improve cognition. The present study examined the effect of 40 Hz binaural beats (BB) and monaural beats (MB) on attention and electroencephalography (EEG). A total of 25 first-year psychology students (11 males, 14 females) performed a Flanker task while EEG was recorded during the 5 min-presentation of pink noise (PN), MB and BB. With respect to attention, as measured by the Flanker task, the number of false responses in the BB condition was smaller than that in the PN condition while the number of false responses in the MB condition was larger as compared to the PN condition. As there was no association of BB with a consistent increase in absolute 40 or 45 Hz power compared to PN or MB, EEG recordings could not confirm the hypothesized neural entrainment in the brain. Overall, the current findings show that listening to 40 Hz BB improves attention but do not show the occurrence of neural entrainment. Future research is recommended to include a larger sample, to use a broader cognitive test battery and to present auditory beats with a longer duration.
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