Brainwave Entrainment and
Sleep
The brain uses electrical signals to communicate with all the systems in your body.
The rate of these electrical pulses, or brainwaves, can be measured using an EEG
(electroencephalograph) machine. Brainwaves vary in their rhythm depending on what we are
doing.
When we are alert and busy the activity in our brains is fast and the waves are closer together.
When we are relaxed the wave pattern is much slower. As we begin to go to sleep, the brain waves
become slower still.
If you can't sleep your brain waves are most likely not slowing down enough. If you have a busy
mind and can't stop thinking, then you are not relaxing. Your brain waves will keep on going fast
in the same way as they do when you are busy during the day.
This is an EEG reading of brainwave patterns:

Using Brainwaves To Beat
Insomnia
Research has demonstrated that specially constructed sounds or pulsed light can change the
rate at which brain waves pulse.
This response in the brain has been mapped using EEG. If you take a look at the image below you
will see change happening over 6 minutes as the subject is exposed to brainwave entrainment.

When your brainwaves slow down, your heart rate, blood pressure, body temperature, respiration rate
and muscle tension all slow down too. As you listen you become very deeply relaxed and will fall
asleep.
This process is used in the Sleep Sound Program to send you to sleep. Embedded in the music
is a beat or tone that is set to entrain your brain waves to slow down and to pulse
at the natural rate of sleep.
The idea is to get the brain waves to slow right down to alpha and then slower still to theta
and then delta waves. As you listen to this you drift gently into a natural sleep.
Scientific Research On
Brainwave Entrainment
The process of brainwave entrainment is backed by a mountain of scientific research which
has been conducted over the past 70 years. Much has been discovered since the initial work in the
1930s and work continues today. Let me quote from just one of the scientists working in the
field:
"Its difficult to try to responsibly convey some sense of excitement about what
is going on...the field is wild and intriguing... We are at a frontier, and its a terribly exciting
time to be in this line of work" John Kiebeskind, UCLA neurophysiologist
The Research History Of Brainwave
Entrainment
That brain waves could be "entrained", that is synchronized with an external stimulus, was first
discovered in the 1930s. At first researchers used flickering light to induce entrainment. Later
they found that sound could also be used very effectively.
By the 1960s entrainment was being studied for its use in various therapeutic circumstances. One
of these was in helping to calm patients undergoing surgery. The patient's brain waves were
entrained to produce slower waves and this resulted in them being less anxious. The calmer a
patient is about surgery the less bleeding, gagging, and pain is endured.
Studies have continued until the present day, each new study shedding more light on the process and
its uses. Entrainment is now known to be useful in treating many problems. These include ADD,
chronic pain, depression, headache, PMS and, of more interest to us, insomnia.
The Beats Used To Entrain The Brain
In 1972 a landmark paper was published in Scientific American by Dr.Gerard Oster on the
potential uses of binaural beats and monaural beats (a single tone or
beat) and noting that monaural beats were more effective at producing entrainment than
binaural beats. (You'll learn more about these beats when you buy the program)
Another notable study by Dr. Arturo Mans in 1981 showed that isochronic were able
to produce brain wave entrainment much more strongly than either binaural or monaural beats.
Why then is brain wave entrainment not more widely known and prescribed? After all it can be used
very cheaply at home. Maybe that is where the answer lies. Cheap home remedies do not make anyone
much money.
Drug companies are the major researchers and research funders. They are not going to sink
millions into something that will not provide them with a return on their investment. Drug company
reps educate doctors on the latest sleeping pills so its natural that these are what doctors tend
to prescribe.
This sound technology, brainwave entrainment, is used for other purposes than for
insomnia, but that is another story.
More information on the types of beat or tone used in brainwave entrainment.
Discover Sleep Sound Sleep CD
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