Sound machines and “sleep sounds” are often marketed as a cure for restless nights, but new research suggests they may ...
Newborn brains respond strongly to rhythm changes in music, suggesting that timing expectations develop earlier than melody ...
A Steinway Spirio player piano can capture every detail of a performance and reproduce it, keystroke for keystroke. In ...
Sensory illusions reveal how the brain creates coherence when signals don’t align. In autism and ADHD, perception often ...
Sound machines may not be the sleep saviors many believe. Researchers found that pink noise significantly reduced REM sleep, ...
Learning to read reshapes how the brain processes language. New research from Baycrest and the University of São Paulo shows that learning to read fundamentally changes how the brain responds to ...
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Children and adolescents affected by juvenile fibromyalgia show greater sensitivity to non-painful sensory stimuli, such as ...
Pink noise is different. Instead of equal energy at each frequency, the energy halves with every doubling of frequency (so ...
Sound machines promise better sleep, but new research suggests they may quietly steal your REM and deep sleep.
In A Nutshell Pink noise at 50 decibels reduced REM sleep by 19 minutes per night in healthy adults, potentially affecting ...
Pink noise, a staticky sound that’s supposed to help people fall asleep, may actually worsen your rest, a new study found.