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  #121  
Old 03-29-2008, 07:32 AM
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Thumbs up Thanks!...I've updated the link...


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Music\auditory Stimulus and the Epileptic Brain...List of music/epilepsy related links...CWE Members can also visit Speber's Auditorium where they can vote on how different music affects them in simple polls.
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  #122  
Old 04-07-2008, 11:09 AM
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Well here are a few more songs that help me feel better. I think many of you will also like them.







http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5NIQG1UL8YA
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Last edited by BIGMAN131307; 04-07-2008 at 12:58 PM. Reason: video was missing
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  #123  
Old 04-07-2008, 12:48 PM
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Cool Awesome!.....


Love Pet Sounds by the Beach Boys!....I'm adding something to the Auditorium!
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Music\auditory Stimulus and the Epileptic Brain...List of music/epilepsy related links...CWE Members can also visit Speber's Auditorium where they can vote on how different music affects them in simple polls.
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  #124  
Old 04-09-2008, 12:42 PM
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A few more oldies for the CWE group.





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  #125  
Old 04-09-2008, 12:55 PM
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Something I've found


I've found that what music makes me feel better depends on my mood and that listening to music that reflects the mood I'm in helps me work through it. For example if I"m depressed depressing music helps bring me out of it (Leonard Cohen is good for that). If I'm angry punk helps me release that anger. I've also found that as I get older I value relaxation music (classical, new age & various instrumental music) more & more.
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  #126  
Old 04-09-2008, 06:46 PM
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Cool I tend to agree Epileric...


...Leonard has been added to Speber's Auditorium .

Nice.
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Music\auditory Stimulus and the Epileptic Brain...List of music/epilepsy related links...CWE Members can also visit Speber's Auditorium where they can vote on how different music affects them in simple polls.

Last edited by speber; 04-09-2008 at 06:52 PM.
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  #127  
Old 05-03-2008, 10:23 PM
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Brain Music Therapy


This is really interesting. I know you'll enjoy it Speber (click the link for the full article - there's more to the story):
Quote :
I'M RELAXING in a chair upstairs inside Suite 11 of the historic Kiely House in Santa Clara, a Queen Anne Victorian dating back to the 19th century. Dr. Sue Klear, a licensed psychologist specializing in neurofeedback, has just attached seven sensors to my head and face with an odorless skin-prepping gel to prepare me for the initial stages of Brain Music Therapy, an experimental treatment for insomnia, anxiety, depression and stress.

The treatment records an individual's brain waves using an Electroencephalogram (EEG), analyzes them and then converts them into two piano tracks—one "relaxing file" and one "activating file." These are eventually burned onto a CD for the patient to play while going to sleep and after waking up, the idea being that the musical sounds form a correlation to your specific brain waves in order to help eliminate imbalanced brain activity. So, theoretically, you end up sleeping much better and function more productively during the day.

Originally developed at the Moscow Medical Academy as a nonpharmacological method for treating insomnia in the early '90s, Brain Music Therapy has received a boost from some scientific evidence of its effectiveness, including randomized double-blind studies in small-scale groups. It is now used on an experimental basis throughout the world to treat a variety of neurological scenarios including post traumatic stress disorder, attention deficit disorder (ADD) and withdrawal symptoms from drug or alcohol dependence. The Russian-born Dr. Galina Mindlin received the exclusive rights to provide this treatment in the United States in 2004 and has now treated hundreds of patients through her private practice in New York. Twenty other doctors throughout the United States now use the therapy as part of their practice, and Dr. Klear is the only one in the Bay Area who uses it. She runs her practice out of Suite 11 in the Kiely House.

Here's the procedure: Dr. Klear first takes me through a basic medical evaluation, which includes me filling out two questionnaires, the Beck Depression Inventory and the Subjective Sleep Scale. Then I sit in the chair while the sensors are placed at key points to pick up my brain waves. This part of the procedure takes about five minutes and Dr. Klear throws some tranquil ocean sounds into the stereo to help me relax, the idea being that the patient needs to be in as relaxed a state as possible during the EEG, so the proper brain waves are recorded. She even closes the window to block out the traffic sounds from outside.

My brain waves are then recorded into the software and Dr. Klear sends the files off to the main center for Brain Music Therapy in Moscow. Since the Russians apparently have a patent on the algorithm that converts the brain waves into musical sounds, that part of the process must be done in Moscow and nowhere else, which adds to the conspiratorial Cold War–esque-KBG-mind-control-outer-space quality of this entire scenario. Before succumbing to the EEG, everyone has to sign a "Brain Music Informed Consent," which includes this statement: "I agree to allow my personalized EEG recording to be emailed to Moscow so that my personalized recording can be created."
...
Sustain in the Brain

It sounds an awful lot like OchsLabs LENS system as far as the underlying mechanism is concerned (though the feedback technology is different).
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  #128  
Old 05-03-2008, 11:34 PM
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Hi to all!

May be I'm saying now like conservative hunker, but my opinion about this "brainmusic from Moscow" is plain and simple:

It's a sort of well known AVE (audio-visual entrainment) therapy, at best.

See for details here:

http://www.mindalive.com/1_0/article%201.pdf

and there:

http://www.hyperprogram.com/Descargas/Entrainment.pdf

Things like "e-mailing to Moscow, coding", etc. are just necessary psychological tricks to enhance placebo- component of this training.

Sure, any good music possesses heailing effect on the mind.

Let's remember so called "Mozart effect" etc.

But special music coded in Moscow... Even based on EEG... No, ladies and gentlemen - is far beyond my understanding...

Best to all!
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  #129  
Old 05-04-2008, 11:02 AM
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Cool Thanks guys!...


I likes 'em both! I'm adding them to my links section!
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Music\auditory Stimulus and the Epileptic Brain...List of music/epilepsy related links...CWE Members can also visit Speber's Auditorium where they can vote on how different music affects them in simple polls.
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