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The
Hemi-Sync® Process
by F. Holmes Atwater, Research Division, The Monroe Institute
(June 1999)
Introduction
Robert
Monroe developed and patented a binaural-beat technology called the Hemi-Sync
auditory-guidance system. The Monroe Institute, a 501c(3) nonprofit research
and educational organization, uses this Hemi-Sync system within an educational
process. During this process individuals listen to a combination of multiplexed
audio binaural beats that are mixed with music, pink sound2, and/or the
natural sound of surf. Binaural-beat stimulation, coupled with the effects
of the other components within the Hemi-Sync process, encourages access
to focused states of consciousness.
Ancient cultures used the natural power of sound and music to safely influence
states of consciousness in religious ceremonies and to promote psychological
and physical health. Today, the idea that auditory stimulation can affect
consciousness is widely accepted (Poole 1993). Hemi-Sync represents the
state-of-the art in the technological application of the natural power
of sound and it has a variety of beneficial applications. Studies have
shown improvements in sensory integration (Morris 1990), relaxation, meditation,
stress reduction, pain management, sleep (Wilson 1990; Rhodes 1993), and
health care (Carter 1993).
Hemi-Sync
has proven effective in producing enriched learning environments, enhanced
memory (Kennerly 1994), improved creativity (Hiew 1995), increased intuition,
improved reliability in remote viewing3 (McMoneagle 1993), telepathy4,
and out-of-body experience5. Understanding of the effectiveness of Hemi-
Sync goes beyond knowing about the natural power of sound to include the
well-known autonomic effects of restricted environmental stimulation,
controlled breathing, progressive relaxation, and the psychology of affirmations
and visualizations.
This
paper discusses the brain-mind model, brain waves and their relationship
to states of consciousness and the role of the reticular activating system
(RAS) in regulating brain waves, and beneficial social-psychological conditioning
and educational processes.
Binaural Beats and The Physiology of the Brain
Binaural beats were discovered in 1839 by a German experimenter, H. W.
Dove. The human ability to "hear" binaural beats appears to be the result
of evolutionary adaptation. Many evolved species can detect binaural beats
because of their brain structure. The frequencies at which binaural beats
can be detected change depending upon the size of the species' cranium.
In the human, binaural beats can be detected when carrier tones6 are below
approximately 1500 Hz (Oster 1973). The relevant issue here, however,
is this innate ability of the brain to detect phase differences between
the ears that enables the perception of binaural beats.
The sensation of "hearing" binaural beats occurs when two coherent sounds
of nearly similar frequencies (less than 1500 Hz) are presented, one to
each ear, and the brain detects phase differences between these sounds.
This phase difference would normally provide directional information to
the listener but when presented with stereo headphones or speakers the
brain integrates the two signals, producing a sensation of a third sound
called the binaural beat.
Perceived as a fluctuating rhythm at the frequency of the difference between
the two (stereo left and right) auditory inputs, binaural beats originate
in the brainstem within the contralateral audio-processing regions called
the superior olivary nuclei (Oster 1973). This auditory sensation is neurologically
routed to the reticular formation (Swann et al. 1982) and simultaneously
volume conducted to the cortex where it can be objectively measured as
a frequency-following response (Oster 1973; Smith, Marsh, & Brown 1975;
Marsh, Brown & Smith 1975; Smith et al. 1978; Hink et al. 1980).
There have been numerous anecdotal reports and a growing number of research
efforts reporting beneficial brain-state changes associated with Hemi-Sync’s
binaural beats. Binaural beats have been associated with changes in arousal
states, attentional focus, and levels of awareness leading to sensory
integration (Morris 1990), improved response to alpha biofeedback training
(Foster 1990), relaxation, meditation, stress reduction, pain management,
improved sleep (Wilson 1990; Rhodes 1993), health care (Carter 1993),
enriched learning environments (Akenhead 1993), enhanced memory (Kennerly
1994), creativity (Hiew 1995), treatment of children with developmental
disabilities (Morris 1996), the facilitation of attention (Guilfoyle &
Carbone 1996), peak and other exceptional experiences (Masluk 1997), enhancement
of hypnotizability (Brady 1997), treatment of alcoholic depression (Waldkoetter
& Sanders 1997), and positive effects on vigilance performance and mood
(Lane et al. 1998).
Passively listening to Hemi-Sync binaural beats may not automatically
engender a focused state of consciousness. The Hemi-Sync process includes
a number of components; binaural beats are only one element. We all maintain
a psychophysiological momentum, a homeostasis that may resist the influence
of the binaural beats. Practices such as humming, toning, breathing exercises,
autogenic training, and/or biofeedback can be used to interrupt the homeostasis
of resistant subjects (Tart 1975).
Naturally
occurring ultradian rhythms driven by the reticular activating system
and characterized by periodic changes in arousal (Webb & Dube 1981; Rossi
1986; Shannahoff-Khalsa 1991), may influence the effectiveness of binaural
beats. One's first-person experience in response to binaural-beat stimulation
may also be affected by a number of psychological mediating factors.
Brain Waves and Consciousness
Controversies concerning the brain, mind, and consciousness have existed
since the early Greek philosophers argued about the nature of the mind-body
relationship, and none of these disputes has been resolved. Modern neurologists
have located the mind in the brain and have said that consciousness is
the result of electrochemical neurological activity. There are, however,
a growing number of observations that challenge the completeness of these
assertions.
There
is no neurophysiological research which conclusively demonstrates that
the higher levels of mind (intuition, insight, creativity, imagination,
understanding, thought, reasoning, intent, decision, knowing, will, spirit,
or soul) are located in brain tissue (Hunt 1995). A resolution to the
controversies surrounding the higher mind and consciousness and the mind-body
problem in general may require an epistemological shift to include extra-rational
ways of knowing (de Quincey 1994) and may well elude comprehension by
neurochemical brain studies alone.
We are in the midst of a revolution focusing on the study of consciousness
(Owens 1995). Penfield (1975), an eminent contemporary neurophysiologist,
found that the human mind continued to work in spite of the brain's reduced
activity under anesthesia. Brain waves were nearly absent while the mind
was just as active as in the waking state. The only difference was in
the content of the conscious experience.
Following
Penfield's work, other researchers have reported awareness in comatose
patients (Hunt 1995) and there is a growing body of evidence which suggests
that reduced cortical arousal while maintaining conscious awareness is
possible (Fischer 1971; West 1980; Delmonte 1984; Wallace 1986; Goleman
1988; Mavromatis 1991; Jevning, Wallace, & Beidenbach 1992). These states
are variously referred to as meditative, trance, altered, hypnagogic,
hypnotic, and twilight-learning states (Budzynski 1986). These various
forms of consciousness rest on the maintenance of awareness in a physiologically
reduced state of arousal marked by parasympathetic dominance (Mavromatis
1991).
Highly
hypnotizable subjects and adept meditators have demonstrated that maintaining
consciousness with reduced cortical arousal is indeed possible in selected
individuals, either as a natural ability or as an acquired skill (Sabourin,
Cutcomb, Crawford, & Pribram 1993). More and more scientists are expressing
doubts about the neurologists' brain-mind model because it fails to answer
so many questions about our ordinary experiences and evades our mystical
and spiritual queries.
Studies
in distant mental influence and mental healing also challenge the notion
of a mind localized within the brain (Dossey 1994; Dossey 1996). Nonlocal
events have been proven to occur at the subatomic level and some researchers
believe that the physics principles behind these events also underlie
nonlocal consciousness-mediated effects (Dossey 1996). The scientific
evidence supporting the phenomenon of remote viewing alone is sufficient
to show that mind-consciousness is not a local phenomenon (McMoneagle
1993).
If mind-consciousness is not the brain, why then does science relate states
of consciousness and mental functioning to brain waves? And why does the
Hemi-Sync process include a binaural-beat technology that has the potential
to alter brain waves? The first question can be answered in terms of instrumentation.
There is no objective way to measure mind or consciousness with an instrument.
Mind-consciousness appears to be a field phenomenon that interfaces with
the body and the neurological structures of the brain (Hunt 1995). This
field cannot be measured directly with current instrumentation.
On
the other hand, the electrical potentials of the body can be measured
and easily quantified. Contemporary science likes things that can be measured
and quantified. The problem here lies in the oversimplification of the
observations. EEG patterns measured on the cortex are the result of electroneurological
activity of the brain. But the brain's electroneurological activity is
not mind-consciousness. Therefore, EEG measurements are only an indirect
means of assessing the mind-consciousness interface with the neurological
structures of the brain.
As
crude as this may seem, the EEG has been a reliable way for researchers
to estimate states of consciousness based on the relative proportions
of EEG frequencies. Stated another way, certain EEG patterns have been
historically associated with specific states of consciousness. Although
not an absolute, it is reasonable to assume, given the current EEG literature,
that if a specific EEG pattern emerges it is probably accompanied by a
particular state of consciousness.
The second question raised in the above paragraph requires a more complex
explanation. The Hemi-Sync process includes the powerful binaural-beat
technology because altering arousal states, attentional focus, and levels
of awareness allows for an increased repertoire of mind-consciousness
experiences. When brain waves move to lower frequencies (lower arousal)
and consciousness is maintained (cognitive experience), a unique state
emerges.
Practitioners
of the Hemi-Sync process call this state of hypnagogia "mind awake/body
asleep." Slightly higher brain-wave frequencies can lead to hyper-suggestive
states of consciousness. Still higher frequencies are associated with
the alert and focused levels of attention necessary for the optimal performance
of many tasks.
Perceived reality changes depending on the state of consciousness of the
perceiver (Tart 1975). Some states of consciousness provide limited views
of reality, while others provide an expanded awareness of reality. For
the most part, states of consciousness vary in response to the ever-changing
internal environment and surrounding stimulation. For example, states
of consciousness are subject to influences like drugs and circadian and
ultradian rhythms (Webb & Dube 1981; Rossi 1986; Shannahoff-Khalsa 1991).
Specific
states of consciousness can also be learned as adaptive behaviors to demanding
circumstances (Green & Green 1986). Functioning through the mechanism
of the extended reticular-thalamic activating system, Hemi-Sync offers
access to a wide variety of altered-state experiences for those wanting
to explore the realms of consciousness.
Hemispheric Synchronization
The term "Hemi-Sync" was chosen as a trademark because perceiving
the binaural beat indicates that the audio processing centers in the two
hemispheres of the brain are functioning coherently, or in sync with each
other. Many of the states of consciousness available through this technology
have been identified as presenting unique hemispherically synchronized
brain-wave frequencies.
Although
synchronized brain waves have long been associated with meditative and
hypnagogic states, Hemi-Sync may be unique in its ability to induce and
improve such states of consciousness. The reason for this is physiological.
Each ear is "hardwired" (so to speak) to both hemispheres of the brain
(Rosenzweig 1961). Each hemisphere has its own olivary nucleus (sound-processing
center) which receives signals from each ear. When a binaural beat is
perceived there are actually two electrochemical, synaptic waves of equal
amplitude and frequency present, one in each hemisphere. This is, in and
of itself, hemispheric synchrony of synaptic activity.
The
unique binaural beats of the Hemi- Sync system appear to contribute to
the hemispheric synchronization evidenced in meditative and hypnagogic
states of consciousness. Hemi-Sync's binaural beats may also enhance brain
function by enabling the user to reconcile cross-collosal connectivity
at designated brain-wave frequencies.
The two cerebral hemispheres of the brain are like two separate information-processing
modules. Both are complex cognitive systems; both process information
independently and in parallel; and their interaction is neither arbitrary
nor continuous (Zaidel 1985). States of consciousness can be defined not
only in terms of brain-wave frequency ratios, but also in terms of hemispheric
specialization and/or interaction. An individual's cognitive repertoire
and, therefore, his ability to perceive reality and deal with the everyday
world, is subject to his ability to experience various states of consciousness
(Tart 1975).
The Hemi-Sync Process Alters States of Consciousness
The extended reticular-thalamic activation system (ERTAS) regulates brain-wave
activity (Newman 1997), an essential element in altering consciousness.
The word reticular means "net-like" and the neural reticular formation
itself is a large, net- like diffuse area of the brainstem (Anch et al.
1988). The reticular activating system (RAS) interprets and reacts to
information from internal stimuli, feelings, attitudes, and beliefs as
well as external sensory stimuli by regulating arousal states, attentional
focus, and levels of awareness by definition, elements of consciousness
itself (Empson 1986; Tice & Steinberg 1989). How we interpret, respond,
and react to information then, is managed by the brain’s reticular formation
stimulating the thalamus and cortex, and controlling attentiveness and
levels of arousal (Empson 1986).
In order to alter arousal states, attentional focus, and levels of awareness,
it is necessary to provide some sort of information input to the RAS.
Hemi-Sync’s binaural beats provide this information. The information referred
to here is the complex, brain-wave-like pattern of the Hemi-Sync binaural
beat. This unique binaural-beat (neurologically evidenced by the EEG frequency-following
response) is recognized by the RAS as brain-wave pattern information.
If internal stimuli, feelings, attitudes, beliefs, and external sensory
stimuli are not in conflict with this information (e.g., an internal,
even unconscious, fear may be a source of conflict), the RAS will alter
states of consciousness to match the Hemi-Sync stimulus as a natural function
of maintaining homeostasis7.
As time passes, the RAS monitors both the internal and external environment
and arousal states, attentional focus, and levels of awareness to determine,
from moment to moment, the most suitable way to deal with existing conditions.
As long as no conflicts develop, the RAS naturally continues aligning
the listener’s state of consciousness with the information in the brain-wave-like
pattern of the Hemi-Sync sound field.
In objective, measurable terms, EEG-based research provides evidence of
Hemi-Sync’s influence on arousal states, attentional focus, and levels
of awareness. Since the RAS regulates cortical EEG (Swann et al. 1982),
monitoring EEG chronicles performance of the RAS. There have been several
free-running EEG studies (Foster 1990; Sadigh 1990; Hiew 1995, among others)
which suggest that Hemi-Sync binaural beats induce alterations in EEG.
Because the RAS is responsible for regulating EEG (Swann et al. 1982;
Empson 1986), these studies document measurable changes in RAS function
during exposure to Hemi-Sync.
But this is only part of the Hemi-Sync process. First-person experience
of consciousness is much more than just arousal states, attentional focus,
and levels of awareness. The cognitive content of the experience is what
gives it meaning. Whereas a specific state of cortical arousal is induced
by the Hemi-Sync binaural beats, the content portion of a focused state
of consciousness depends on social-psychological conditioning and the
mental ability of the individual.
The
educational application of the Hemi-Sync technology incorporates these
dimensions. In terms of social-psychological conditioning, the Hemi-Sync
audio-guidance media provide instructions on relaxation and breathing,
affirmations for objectifying personal intent, and guided visual imagery.
In the Institute's educational programs, skilled trainers mediators sensitive
to the subtle indices of participants’ phrasing, body language, and expressiveness
provide counseling and encourage group interaction to insure an environment
conducive to enhanced cognitive experience within specific Hemi-Sync generated
states of cortical arousal, called Focus Levels.
Trainers are experienced in the realms being explored by program participants.
Because they have first-hand knowledge of these worlds they can help others
alter their own social-psychological conditioning. Trainers encourage
introspection on the part of participants to aid in the integration and
realization of novel experiences. When appropriate, trainers encourage
participants to reframe their experiences into more useful perspectives.
To the degree that mental ability defines one’s capacity to experience,
cognitive skills can be enhanced through educational processes. Participants
are offered materials to read. Informative lectures are scheduled throughout
the duration of the programs. The use of multimedia enhances the presentation
of educational materials. Planned group discussions provide the opportunity
to share and to inspire each other. Development through practice is at
the core of the educational process and participants are given numerous
opportunities to experience the exciting focused states of consciousness
available within the Hemi-Sync process.
Summary
The patented Hemi-Sync auditory-guidance system provides a safe, natural
means to alter arousal states, attentional focus, and levels of awareness.
The Hemi-Sync process is a unique combination of this powerful brain-wave
modification technology, coupled with well-understood psycho-physiological
inductive techniques (restricted environmental stimulation, controlled
breathing, progressive relaxation, etc.), supportive social-psychological
conditioning procedures, and conventional teaching methods.
Footnotes
1a. Patent Number: 3884218; Issue Year: 1975; State/Country: VA; Marketed
as: Hemi-Sync; Inventor: Robert A. Monroe; Title: Method of Inducing and
Maintaining Various Stages of Sleep in the Human Being. b. Patent Number:
5213562; Issue Year: 1993; State/Country: VA; Marketed as: Hemi-Sync;
Inventor: Robert A. Monroe; Title: Method of Inducing Mental, Emotional
and Physical States of Consciousness, Including Specific Mental Activity,
in Human Beings. c. Patent Number: 5356368; Issue Year: 1994; State/Country:
VA; Marketed as: Hemi-Sync; Inventor: Robert A. Monroe; Title: Method
of Inducing Desired States of Consciousness.
2.
Pink sound is "white noise" (like the hiss sound from a television after
a station has stopped transmitting) which has been equalized for human
hearing to create a more pleasing natural sound.
3.
Remote viewing is the ability to describe objects and activities blocked
from sensory input by time or space by mental means alone.
4.
Telepathy is commonly referred to as direct mind-to-mind communication,
a rather limiting definition when compared to Robert Monroe's broader
nonverbal communication.
5.
One's mind is always experienced as being either in or out of the body.
It depends on where awareness is focused. Being out-of-body simply means
that there is no direct connection to certain material levels of consciousness.
Being out-of-body is a consciousness experience with a shift of mind-consciousness
field energy and locale. (Hunt 1995)
6.
Electronically produced binaural beats can be "heard" when audio tones
of slightly different frequencies referred to as carrier tones are presented,
one to each ear.
7.
The brain automatically and actively regulates all body functions to maintain
homeostasis—an internal equilibrium (Green & Green 1977; Swann et al.
1982). In a natural and constant attempt to maintain a homeostasis of
the elements of consciousness, the RAS actively monitors and continues
the neural replication of ongoing brain-wave states (unless, of course,
there is reason to make an adjustment due to new information from internal
sources or external sensory input).
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