Paul_J
Member
Registered: 6th Jun 02
Location: London
User status: Offline
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http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/07/15/digital-drugs-get-teens-h_n_647397.html
god.... what a load of shit.
A sample track
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FpGL7Ba8kA0
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Rich H
Member
Registered: 26th Oct 05
Location: West Sussex Drives: E46 M3
User status: Offline
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AlunJ
Member
Registered: 3rd Apr 07
Location: Newport
User status: Offline
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just sounds like listening to the washing machine wtf
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Daveskater
Premium Member
Registered: 29th Apr 08
Location: Oxford, UK Drives: Jap wagon
User status: Offline
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What a horrible noise
Numberwang!
Originally posted by AlunJ
I like you Dave, you are a man of men
Originally Whatapp'd by Neo
Dave's maybe capable of a drive-by cuddle
Look at my pictures
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Jake
Member
Registered: 24th Jan 05
User status: Offline
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ive heard worse things, dubstep for a start
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AlunJ
Member
Registered: 3rd Apr 07
Location: Newport
User status: Offline
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quote: Originally posted by jake
ive heard worse things, dubstep for a start
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John
Member
Registered: 30th Jun 03
User status: Offline
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I was full of that i-dosing at TITP.
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Dom
Member
Registered: 13th Sep 03
User status: Offline
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Research into brainwave synchronisation has being going on for years, some papers i've read say it can manipulate and cause excessive brainwave activity, while others say it's a load betty.
I was pissing around with binaural beats (beat being the term used to describe the sum/interference of two slightly different frequencies) a few years back in uni as it's pretty straight forward to produce (use something like MaxMSP or Reaktor). Basically you feed your right ear one frequency (say 375Hz), your left ear another (say 425Hz) and because of your olivies (which are part of your medulla oblongata, think that's the spelling, in your brainstem) you perceive a beat frequency, which in this case would be 50Hz (you usually work with tighter frequencies which tend to result in subsonic beat's) and a carrier frequency, which would be 400Hz.
I can't say i've ever "dosed" off it but i've stumbled upon a few frequencies that have made me feel a bit rough.
There are a few other audio methods that apparently stimulate brainwave activity, isochronic tones being one of them.
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