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1love wrote:Is it possible to change a mono track to a stereo?
does anyone know where i can get binuarals tracks or beats or even if i can make them myself and wich frequencies are safe?
Im pretty sure a subliminal is just one track layered under another but at a very low volume so you don't pick up on it right?
dottie wrote: Use a base frequency that is in the audible range for both people and stereo audio equipment (>60Hz <21,000Hz). Virtual Hypnotist software uses something around 160Hz +/- 3Hz as a default. ( For a 6Hz Theta binaural )
1love wrote:Still rather confusing but i see where i went wrong. one more question thought. If its best to get the listner into a certain brain state and the brain state i want to get them in is say alpha at 7Hz, would i put say left channel 7.1 and right channel say 7.4? just for experiments sake.
Where are all these huge numbers in the thousands coming from?
Thank you blink im starting to understandBlink wrote:1love wrote:Still rather confusing but i see where i went wrong. one more question thought. If its best to get the listner into a certain brain state and the brain state i want to get them in is say alpha at 7Hz, would i put say left channel 7.1 and right channel say 7.4? just for experiments sake.
Where are all these huge numbers in the thousands coming from?
Binaural beats are still more theory than science. The theory is that you can entrain the brain to a particular frequency by playing a sound.
Here's the trick. The frequency range you're trying to get in the brain is measured in cycles per second (hertz, Hz). But your audio equipment can only play, and you can only hear, frequencies in the range of thousands of cycles per second (kilohertz, KHz).
The "binaural" part is how you make your equipment and your ears do something they can't do.
If you play one tone in the left ear and another tone in the right ear, your brain recognizes the difference between the tones. Therefore, if you're trying to target the 7 Hz frequency, you'd want to play two tones that differ by... 7 Hz. That means you'll need to play two audible tones (KHz) that differ by 7 Hz. Google for the frequency range of human hearing. More importantly, check to see what your headphones/speakers/etc. can produce. If it's not coming out of your speakers, it's not going into your head.
When you get something that sounds a little like the Emergency Broadcast System warning tone (US television and radio), you'll know you're in the ballpark.
-- Blink
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