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What Sound is Capable of, and How the Schemers Have Profiteered on It - Part 2

To further fuel the flame, white noise even breeds cortisol secretion, a stress hormone that reduces the dopamine levels in the brain regions responsible for learning and memorizing.

By cheryl bobbiePublished 4 years ago 3 min read
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What Sound is Capable of, and How the Schemers Have Profiteered on It - Part 2
Photo by Jonas Zürcher on Unsplash

As a rule, given the fierce arguments on its capabilities, white noise generators still are getting all the rage on the market. They've, thus, paved the right way for pink, brown or blue sounds and many a "trendy" generator. After all, our advice still is taking it slow.

We're not too desperate to turn to these two-bit "tricks".

Let alone the sound that leverages our performance; many a person has taken up the habit of listening to music while learning. Notably, they purport that classical music might boost up their intellectual levels. This way, they've fallen for the so-called Mozart Effect. Popped up around the early 1990s, it has since catalyzed getting infants exposed to classical music and musical toys. That said, subsequent studies could hardly ever point out much evidence to support the hypothesis, nor could the data spell out any drastic change in IQ and the abilities to address logical issues.

Still, even when it's not getting you any smarter, keep it up, since classical music is not a fraud. It is rather enjoyable, as long as you keep the volume at a hearable level.

Bringing up the rear, researchers have hardly given any specific advice on how music might correlate learning process. They, however, recommend that songs with lyrics might get more distracting than instrumental music.

Given that "instrumental music" can be any less of ridicule. We've all too often seen digital drugs (i-doser), music that gets you "high" as if you were consuming stimulants, and the videos with the background music "capable of changing the eye "colour going viral and still latent on the internet.

I did try clicking on an i- doser Youtube video to immediately turn it off, for I could hardly stand its nonsensical and distressing noises. To put into perspective, i-dosers feast the so-called old-as-the-hills binaural beats technique. It was first discovered by the 1800s, proclaiming that sound frequency difference in-between the two headsets would get the brain excited as efficiently as "drugs".

Given that it was any less of a fabrication. If any, it must have been a placebo effect, an internal pressure when one's "bros" brags about the "getting high" experience. Ridiculously enough, it might as well lead to a psychological readiness to "try" when juvenile arrives. On sale for $5 a 30-minute piece, it still is a million times downloaded from download.com.

(I know all too well that you'd attempt to "try". Still, it does never work, folks).

How about sounds that change the eye colour?

It's critical to bitterly acknowledge that eye colour is a perplexing genetic trait regulated by genes and some other genetic factors. Given that we, for the most part, are having our eye colour fixed around six, there do exist the odd ones out having their eye colours changed later in life.

Digging deeper, scientists did conclude that the changes to eye colour are contingent upon certain pre-existing conditions, to name a few, the Horner Syndrome and Fuchs heterochromic iritis (FHI). Wearing contact lenses might temporarily change eye colours, forasmuch as permanent changes can only be brought about during iris surgery. After all, both mean to gamble our health on specific risks.

Clinically, there's rarely been any officially published research on changing eye colour without medical intervention. Still, the sound clips profiteering on subliminal stimuli is going all the way around. Miraculous as it might sound, many a video has been CAPS LOCK entitled that they are to facilitate the growth of height, smoking quit, build up self-esteem or even ... treat cancer (?!).

After all, everything, albeit ridiculous, is capable of thriving in this world. And whatever it is, there exist individual bigots. The most common things that are believed are often meaningless or deceptive, causing you to lose time, money or even risk health.

The "key-selling point" of these frauds is "a-miraculous-duck-soup" (no pain, many again). Rather, should you ever savour fantasy, I'd recommend the audiobook series of the "Lord of the Rings" instead of either i-doser or subliminal.

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About the Creator

cheryl bobbie

A word after a word after a word is power.

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