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Scientists Create Lullabies From Brain Waves

Lord Custos writes "From ABC News: Your Brain Waves are Better than Sleeping Pills! Everyone has a song in them...literally. And you can use it to put yourself to sleep. Canadian scientists have discovered that deep sleep can be induced in insomniacs by copying the insomniacs brainwaves, turning it into 'music', and then playing this 'audio transcription' of their own sleep brainwave pattern back to them."

26 of 239 comments (clear)

  1. old? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Isn't this actually 'old'? It's a well known fact you synchronize your brainwaves to the music you hear if it falls into an acceptable pattern. Heck, even look at commercial stuff like CoolEdit, which has a brainwave pattern generator built in for editing music. It even has some scripting to make your brain ready for specific things (like sleep brainwave patterns).

    There are even commercial devices based on the concept. Like the flashing-glasses-beeping-headphones combo machines. And it seems only natural that you'd sleep better when you can listen to a sleep brainwave pattern tuned exactly to yours, instead of a 'general' one...

    1. Re:old? by HimalayanRoadblock · · Score: 3, Informative

      the flashing-glasses-beeping-headphones combo machines

      Those are for LUCID DREAMING. In laymans terms thats a dream in which u are aware its a dream and you take control. Go to google and search for lucid dreaming. You'll find more information than you want to know about.

  2. Abuse? by dlek · · Score: 3, Funny

    Will it still put me to sleep if I play it really, really loud?

  3. Interesting.... by FuzzyMan45 · · Score: 3, Funny

    I wonder if it sounds anything like cat /dev/urandom > /dev/dsp. Personally, i think Seti@home executable sounds the coolest, followed by any NTFS filesystem. Dont ask me why, but sometimes it sounds like trance/techno music, even has the right BPM.

  4. AutoZen by sheol · · Score: 5, Interesting

    take a look at this software project AutoZen.

    from their site: "AutoZen is a software 'brain machine' for Linux. It generates sounds that are meant to cause the brain to temporarily shift to a different dominant frequency and cause the user to experience an altered state of consciousness. It is similar to the devices seen in the 'Sharper Image' catalog and in magazine ads, but the price is a lot more attractive!"

  5. Didjeridus by jukal · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I quess australian aboriginals have knewn this for long. Have you ever heard someone really good play a didjeridu (didgeridoo)? Have sleeping problems? Our first son had some, then one day, we put the didjeridu cassette in the player, and not just our boy, but rest of the family felt asleep in a matter of minutes. If you have never heard with it sounds like, here is some samples. If brain waves don't sound like that, I am amazed ;))

    1. Re:Didjeridus by blastedtokyo · · Score: 5, Informative
      Next time read the article.

      'The participants showed dramatic improvement over placebo participants who listened to someone else's brain music instead of their own.

      "For the placebo group, the improvement was only about 15 percent as compared to 75 to 85 percent for the experimental group. So it's a highly significant statistical difference,"'

      In other words, you need to listen to your own brainwaves, not some random noise or someone else's rhythms.

    2. Re:Didjeridus by jukal · · Score: 3, Funny
      > You can fall asleep to Didjeridus? They just give me bad headaches

      Uhm. I am able to fall asleep while laying on the floor with two kids jumping over my back, having Tarzan with volume jumping in the TV and yelling, and my wife jumping all over the house because she's trying to speak to me, and I hear nothing. Compare didgeridoo to that, and it's a miracle. :)

  6. Implications by prockcore · · Score: 5, Funny

    I wonder if I can

    cat /proc/kcore | /dev/dsp

    to put my computer to sleep.

    1. Re:Implications by JamesSharman · · Score: 5, Funny

      I don't know about that but:

      cat /dev/dsp > /proc/kcore

      Will definetly work! :-)

  7. Worse by Raul654 · · Score: 3, Funny

    I can just imagine it now - some company would go into buisness taking EEG recordings of celebrities and offering them for sale. Just imagine how many people pay to listen to the brainwaves Bill Gates, or Marylin Mason, Calista Flockhart (food bad, thin good, food bad, thin good), etc etc. I guess it all depends on your taste.

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    To make laws that man cannot, and will not obey, serves to bring all law into contempt.
    --E.C. Stanton
  8. This must be an advertisement by ndogg · · Score: 5, Funny

    What better place than here to find insomniacs?

    Cowboy Neal is obviously no exception to the rule:
    "Posted by CowboyNeal on Thursday August 29, @02:15AM"

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    // file: mice.h
    #include "frickin_lasers.h"
  9. Addiction. by jericho4.0 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    from the end of the article: "And here's the neat part. It won't become addictive. There won't be any serious side effects, like those caused by various medications that are now available." It seems to me that it could addictive. Many addictions result from the body lowering production of naturally ocuring substances because it's being replaced with the addictive substance. Remove the substance and you go into withdrawl. Who's to say that, over time, the brain wouldn't lose the ability to generate these patterns naturally? People noted the simularity of music and brain waves a long time ago. I bet with hi-fi equipment we could pull out some very cool sounding stuff. - it would be interesting to transcribe brain waves of anger/sex/high states.

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    "A language that doesn't affect the way you think about programming, is not worth knowing" - Alan Perlis
    1. Re:Addiction. by prockcore · · Score: 3, Funny

      Some addictions aren't bad anyways.

      I'm addicted to breathing... if I stop breathing for even a minute, my body goes through severe withdrawl. But someone told me that for all physical addictions, it's out of your system after 3 days and then you'll just need to cope with the mental addiction.

      One of these days I'll hold my breath for 3 days, and finally kick this air addiction that's ruling my life and hindering my dream of becoming a merman.

  10. ... and statistics. by valentyn · · Score: 4, Insightful

    As the saying goes "lies, damned lies and statistics", this research proves it again: "Ten persons who had suffered from insomnia [...] For the placebo group, the improvement was only about 15 percent as compared to 75 to 85 percent for the experimental group". That means that three quarters of a person in the (5 persons) placebo group slept better, whereas 3.75 to 4.25 persons slept better with their own brain music. "10 persons is not a large group, but the project builds on numerous other related studies". Yeah right. Maybe psychiatrist Leonid Kayumov listened too much to his own brain music? (So maybe it is addictive! ;)

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    my other sig is a 500 page novel
    1. Re:... and statistics. by DennyK · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Err, I think they were referring to how much the group improved as a whole, not how many members of the group showed improvement.

      Still, it would be nice to see the experiment done on a larger sample.

      DennyK

  11. Obvious Questions by guttentag · · Score: 4, Funny
    What military applications exist for this new lullaby technology?

    Can we scan the enemy's brainwaves and put him to sleep? Can we scan the brainwaves of foreign dignitaries while they visit the White House, put them to sleep and steal their pocket change and state secrets while they're out cold? How long will it take to weaponize these lullabies? Can the weapon be mounted on a satellite or disguised as a pack of cigarettes?

    Dammit, you should have figured these things out before announcing this. We need to know and we need to know now.

  12. How soon until Creative Labs picks this up? by tRoll+with+Butter · · Score: 3, Funny

    Hell, the Audigy already has every OTHER feature imaginable. "Now includes Sleep Blaster(TM) Technology via a FireWire-enabled aluminum foil hat!"

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    Siggy, siggy, siggy, can't you see? Sometimes your puns just irritate me.
  13. A Safer High by Associate · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Like many folks, I don't do drugs. (Thanks Nancy.) But, I am curious about the alledged mind expanding possibilities. If you scan someone through a trip and play it back to them to see if it compares, could you not at least experience to a lesser degree how that person tripped? If so, bring on the acid.

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    Someone hates these cans.
  14. Example! :) by Jugalator · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Go here, scroll down to (or search for) Brainwave Synchronizer. Click Low or High Speed listen. Requires a JavaScript enabled browser.

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    Beware: In C++, your friends can see your privates!
  15. Now try the reverse by foo12 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Analyze existing musical lullabyes and see how they compare to sleep brainwave patterns.

  16. I try it but ... by YeeHaW_Jelte · · Score: 4, Funny

    ... my brains would probably just produce a heap of white noise, as I can't make up my mind.

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    "The chances of a demonic possession spreading are remote -- relax."
  17. Better way already available by Anonymous+Squonk · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The problem with this is that it has to be customized for each person. A more convenient solution that is already in use in infant soothing toys is a simulated heartbeat noise, like the kind a fetus would hear while inside the mother. It reminds the baby of being inside the womb, and comforts them into falling asleep faster. But I've found that this also works well even on adults, as I think this "comfort pattern" that is etched in our brains from before birth remains in our subconscious as long as we live. Far easier than mapping your brainwaves, and you can pick one up in a department store for under $50.

  18. SBaGen by dSV3Hl · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Similar to AutoZen is SBaGen, which lets you build scripts to be played over time. For Linux, Windows, and OSX.

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    -- [ta]
  19. Hebb's principle by xant · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Assuming that the pattern of brain activity is always roughly the same when you're trying to fall asleep, this follows logically from a tenet of biological psychology called Hebb's principle. It states that when two neurons fire together, the connection between them is strengthened.

    To explain, I'm going to invent a symbology. X,Y,Z, and K represent neurons in different regions of the brain. I'll create an arbitrary pattern that represents when each of those neurons fire. Let's say that as you fall asleep you normally have a pattern like: XYZYYKKZXK. (I intentionally avoided using A, B, C here for the musical connotations therein.) Let's say it's mapped into music now:
    XYZYYKKZXK (neurons firing)->
    ABCBBGGCAG (notes played)

    When you hear the note A, a particular region of your auditory centers is activated. When you hear B, a slightly different region is activated, and so on. Coincidentally, a lot of your auditory processing takes place in your brain stem, which is also where a lot of sleep-related functions take place, such as shutting down the body's muscles so you don't sleepwalk every night, but this coincidence isn't necessary for this explanation to work.

    So you listen to your personalized auditory mapping and attempt to fall asleep. Because you're trying to fall asleep, even if you're insomniac, neurons for X will be a little more likely to fire, then neurons for Y, then Z, and so on. At the same time, neurons for A are firing, then B, then C.

    According to Hebb, the synchonicity of these events will cause a physical connection between the neurons to strengthen, regardless of how much neural distance separates them. All the neurons in between will get activated a little bit, and the more they fire together, the more the entire system of connections becomes stronger. You've directly mapped sleep waves into music, so the synchronicity will be very strong. Consequently, the connection between the auditory centers and your sleep centers will get stronger very quickly.

    Make that connection strong enough, and you will eventually be able to cause XYZK to fire by playing ABCG, in essence sending a message to your brain stem via your speakers. Do this long enough, and the feedback may go in the other direction as well: you may start to hear the music every time you fall asleep, regardless of whether it's actually playing.

    Theoretically this would work by mapping those brain waves into just about anything you can perceive, not just sound, although it may work better with sound. For example, mapping it into images would certainly work; you could take the entire discussion above, replace "auditory centers" with "visual centers", and you get the same explanation.

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    It's rare that you're presented with a knob whose only two positions are Make History and Flee Your Glorious Destiny.
  20. Wet Dreams? by Tablizer · · Score: 3

    Naw, my wife would get pissed when it starts to play cheezy porno themes.