
An Empirical Investigation Into the Effect of Beta Frequency
Binaural-beat Audio Signals on Four Measures of Human Memory,
ADD / ADHD
By Richard Cauley Kennerly
ABSTRACT
Beta frequency binaural-beat audio signals were utilized to
investigate facilitation of human performance on two memory tasks and two memory related
tasks. Subjects were 50 college students randomly assigned with a double-blind methodology
to the control or experimental groups. The control group listened to instrumental music.
The experimental group listened to the same music with binaural-beat audio signals bedded
under the music. The four dependent variables used were a 25 item word list recall test, a
25 item word list recall/recognition test, and from the WAIS-R the digit symbol and digit
span subtests. The experimental group displayed statistically significant (p>.05)
increases in mean scores with the word list recall test, the digit symbol subtest, and the
digit span subtest. No statistically significant increases in the experimental mean over
the control mean were noted in the word list recognition/recall subtest. The results
indicate that beta frequency binaural-beat audio signals are an effective method for
facilitating simple free recall memory, ability to attend, and the ability to persevere at
routine motor tasks.
PREFACE
This thesis is the culmination of a long personal struggle with
the educational system. I have always loved questioning and learning. Yet before graduate
school I never enjoyed, or did well in school. I have spent a lifetime on the edge of
academic failure where every mediocre grade was a struggle. As a child, adults told me
that I was smart and that there was no reason I shouldn't be able to make excellent
grades. The unspoken judgement being that I just didn't want to, that there was something
wrong with me or worse, that I just didn't try hard enough. I know I frustrated many
people, yet I was the most frustrated one of all.
As an adult I worked my way through college, and graduated out of
luck and shear persistence. If I failed a class, I took it over until I made the grade I
needed. In graduate school I knew I would need a new strategy, since I could no longer
take classes over with the new grade replacing the old. I could not afford to work so hard
for such mediocre results. I was still very frustrated, and I turned that frustration into
a search for answers.
To my joy, I found a combination of dimethylaminoethanol (DMAE), a
nutrient found in seafood, and binaural-beat signals worked well to offset my learning
disabilities. Click here to
order
What had been an academic Sisyphean struggle became a genuine
pleasure. The effect was one of personal transformation and excellent grades. I felt as
though I had been set free from a life long prison.
The thesis you now hold arises out of my personal success with,
and interest in, binaural-beat signals.
This thesis is dedicated to Elisabeth Schumacher, my mother.
Without her unfailing love and devotion, none of my life achievements would have been
possible. She has believed in me when I didn't believe in myself. She has given me support
when I needed it, without regard for herself. She has loved me beyond all reason, and that
has sustained me down a long and rocky road.
INTRODUCTION
This study is an empirical inquiry into the facilitation of human
memory with the use of beta frequency binaural-beat audio signals (BBS's) under conditions
designed to control for confounding variables. Previous studies have not controlled for
confounding variables, preventing any definite conclusions on the extent to which BBS's
may facilitate memory.
Were the observed results with BBS's in previous research the
result of placebo effects, a confounding variable, or the binaural-beat signals? It is not
an answerable question until research is done demonstrating the effectiveness of BBS's in
facilitating memory under more controlled conditions.
The hypothesis and experimental design of this study are
constructed to be able to answer the question of the effectiveness of BBS's in
facilitating memory under controlled conditions. Statistically significant results in this
study would support earlier non-empirical research which has found BBS's to be useful in
facilitating improved academic performance among mainstream and Attention
Defict/Hyperactive Disorder (ADHD) populations. The results of the earlier studies, and
more tightly controlled studies with other brain wave training techniques, suggest that
beta frequency BBS's should significantly facilitate memory.
Hypothesis and Operational Definition of Memory
There were four hypothesis used in this research, each postulating
that in a study controlling for confounding variables the experimental group would display
a statistically significant improvement in mean scores over the control group at a .05 or
less significance level.
Hypothesis one (H1) postulated a statistically significant higher
mean score for the experimental group as measured by a 25 item word list recall test.
Hypothesis two (H2) postulated a statistically significant higher
mean score for the experimental group as measured by a 25 item word list
recall/recognition test.
Hypothesis three (H3) postulated a statistically significant
higher mean score for the experimental group as measured by the WAIS-R digit symbol
subtest.
Hypothesis four (H4) postulated a statistically significant higher
mean score for the experimental group as measured by the WAIS-R digit span subtest.
The statistically significant improvement in the mean scores of
the experimental group over the control group on any of the tests allows one to infer that
facilitation of test performance occurred. If there were no confounding variables, this
facilitation of test performance can be assumed to be the result of the independent
variable.
The free recall word list test and the combined recognition/recall
test are the two most memory related tasks out of the four presented and thus the two most
relevant to drawing any conclusions about the facilitation of memory. Generally memory can
be characterized as "the ability to reproduce or recount information that was
experienced at an earlier time" (Domjan & Burkhard, 1982, p. 308).
For the purposes of this study memory was operationally defined as
a subject's ability to reproduce the information presented on a test within the limited
time allocated for reproduction of that information.
The Four Dependent Variables
Four tests were administered to each of 50
undergraduates participating in the study to obtain data on the effect of binaural-beat
signals on memory. The first test, word list free recall, was a simple free recall memory
task given to obtain data on the facilitation of memory with beta-frequency binaural-beat
signals.
The second test was a German vocabulary combined
recall-recognition test given to obtain data on the facilitation of memory with a more
complex associative recognition/recall task.
The third and fourth tests were the digit span and
digit symbol subtests of the WAIS-R. These two tests were administered in order to gain
clarity on the observations of teachers who have used binaural-beat signals in their
classrooms. These teachers have reported increases in grades, student attention, and
decreased hyperactivity while using binaural- beat audio signals in their classes
(Edrington, 1985). The two WAIS-R subtests were used to determine if binaural-beat audio
signals could facilitate the ability to attend and persevere at routine tasks.
Facilitation of these two features of cognitive performance may be in part, or in whole,
the underlying factors in the facilitation of memory by binaural-beat signals.
What Are Binaural-Beat Audio Signals?
Binaural-beat audio signals are a specific audio entrainment
technique for altering a subject's brain waves. Alteration of a subject's brain wave
frequency or amplitude produces changes in the subject's performance level on some
cognitive tasks (Hutchinson, 1994). Brain-wave training is the utilization of brain-wave
altering equipment (usually biofeedback equipment) to produce durable changes in a
subject's brain waves (Peniston, & Kulkosky 1989).
Brain-wave training has been found to yield excellent results in
the facilitation of human memory, attention span, and relaxation (Hutchinson, 1994).
Furthermore, this research has been demonstrating brain-wave training as an effective
intervention in impaired levels of functioning due to ADHD, learning disabilities (LD),
physical brain trauma, and psychological trauma (Ochs, 1993).
As a specific technique of brain-wave training, BBS's have not
been empirically studied to produce statistically significant data on how comparable they
are to other forms of brain-wave training. Such results would lay a more solid groundwork
for clinicians and clinician researchers who are using, or interested in using,
binaural-beat brain-wave training.
It is hoped that this study will be one of the first bricks in the
laying of a solid research foundation for support of clinicians and organizations
interested in applied research and application of binaural-beat brain-wave training.
REVIEW OF RELATED LITERATURE
There has been a quiet revolution occurring in the study of human
cognitive functioning and its associated brain wave activity. Breakthroughs have been
occurring whose application may rival the introduction of drug therapies to psychiatry.
This new wave of therapies involves non-drug interventions capable of rapidly healing
previously resistant pathologies and improving cognitive performance in normal subjects.
These new interventions have arisen out of ongoing research in
Electroencephalographic (EEG) feedback. In the sixties, EEG feedback was used primarily to
control stress. However the interest of serious researchers waned as EEG biofeedback was
embraced in the popular culture as a cure all and was tainted with a somewhat disreputable
air by association with the human potential movement. Clinical interest in biofeedback
returned with the decline of popular attention to biofeedback and the publication of
controlled studies showing the effectiveness of biofeedback in chemical and psychometric
tests with up to three years of follow-up (Ochs, 1993).
As new generations of EEG equipment became available, researchers
developed an expanding understanding of brain wave patterns. Associations were found
between specific patterns of brain wave activity and pathological, normal, and optimal
cognitive performance/states.
Utilizing this information, biofeedback researchers have been
training subjects who have frequency patterns associated with various disorders to alter
their brain wave patterns to match those associated with normally functioning individuals
(Hutchinson, 1994). This technique has been found to be a rapid and effective intervention
for many severe and resistant pathologies including, "depression, sleep disorders,
seizures, chronic fatigue, headaches, mood swings, anxiety" (Hutchison, 1994, p.
361), alcoholism, (Peniston, & Kulkosky, 1989), addiction, attention deficit
hyperactive disorder (ADHD), epilepsy, post-traumatic stress, paralysis and cognitive
impairment as a result of a stroke or head injury (Ochs,1993).
On the Million Clinical Multiaxial Inventory (MCMI) brain-wave
training (BWT) resulted in significant decreases on the "scales labeled schizoid,
avoidant, passive-aggressive, schizotypal, borderline, paranoid, anxiety, somatoform,
dysthymia, alcohol abuse, psychotic thinking, psychotic depression, and psychotic
delusion" when used with vietnam veterans suffering from post-traumatic stress
(Peniston, & Kulkosky, 1990, p. 37).
Possible Mechanisms
Underlying Brain-wave Training
Triggering of Neurotransmitters
Why should helping individuals retrain their brain wave frequency
patterns be so helpful? A suggestion might be found in the work of Patterson and Capel
(1983) in Surrey, England. They found that different neurotransmitters were triggered by
different frequencies and wave forms. For example, a 10-hertz signal boosts production and
turnover rate of serotonin. "Each brain center generates impulses at a specific
frequency, based on the predominant neurotransmitters it secretes," says Dr. Capel.
"In other words, the brain's internal communications system--its language, if you
like--is based on frequency..." (Ostrander & Schroeder, 1991, p. 264).
The implications of Capel's & Patterson's work is that one can
alter the brain's neurochemistry, and thereby it's functioning, with modifications of
brain wave frequency.
The popular drug Prozac alleviates depression by increasing
serotonin levels. The serotonin levels are elevated through the selective chemical
inhibition of the brain's serotonin-reuptake enzymes (Kramer, 1993). The positive effect
of Prozac on a depressed subject's mood and social functioning can be profound, effects
which are generated by elevating the subject's serotonin levels.
According to Patterson and Capel, a similar increase in the level
of serotonin in the brain could be achieved through the induction of a 10-hertz signal.
Could we alleviate depression and other impairments associated with low serotonin levels
as effectively with brain wave training as with Prozac? What about other forms of impaired
mental functioning for which we have no effective chemical interventions? According to
many researchers we can, and the triggering of the release of beneficial neurotransmitters
may be why.
Return of the Brain to Pre-Trauma Neurochemical State
The direct release of desirable neurotransmitters through an
increase in amplitude of specific brain wave frequencies might not be the only mode of
action for brain-wave training. A somewhat related theory of why helping subjects retrain
their EEG patterns could be helpful is postulated by Len Ochs, a California therapist and
researcher. Dr. Ochs speculates that the neurochemical response to trauma may become
entrained as a permanent state, limiting normal functioning, and that brain-wave training
may allow a return to the pre-trauma neurochemical state.
Dr. Ochs postulates that psychological or physical trauma induces
such a high level of neurochemical excitement that a seizure may be imminent. In order to
protect itself, the brain responds with inhibitory chemicals. One could visualize it as
the neurochemical equivalent of curling up in a ball. In a protective stance, the
inhibited brain has lost function, just as person curled up in a ball cannot walk or
function normally in their protective posture.
Dr. Ochs postulates that these inhibitory chemicals may linger in
the brain for an extended period of time (one supposes for lack of activation of the
proper janitorial reuptake enzymes) or, that the brain mechanism responsible for the
production of the seizure protecting neurotransmiters does not reset itself to the
pre-trauma state, creating a new homeostatic state of impaired functioning.
If brain-wave training resets the neurochemistry to its pre-trauma
state, such a mechanism would explain why it is helpful, and why it works with pathologies
resistant to other interventions.
EEG Disentrainment Feedback
Dr. Ochs created an EEG biofeedback device which operates directly
on the subjects EEG patterns through light and sound drivers. Normally in EEG biofeedback
a subject must attend to, and attempt to respond to a signal which provides information
about their brain wave frequencies.
Unlike traditional EEG biofeedback, in Dr. Ochs' device there is
no need for the subject to be consciously in the loop or attempting to do anything. The
overall brain waves respond to and match the frequency and amplitude of the signals
delivered via strobe glasses and headphones. The audio and visual stimuli in turn are
generated by the overall amplitude and frequency of the EEG. A computer monitors both and
allows the clinician to intervene and sweep the frequencies upward or downward.
Dr. Ochs calls his form of biofeedback "EEG disentrainment
feedback (E.D.F.)" (Ochs, 1993). The equipment is actually entraining the brainwave
frequencies, yet he refers to it as disentrainment feedback. The disentrainment is for the
hypothesized intervention of disentraining a protection mechanism gone awry, a locked in
state of emergency brain functioning.
Ochs has been having remarkable results with victims of both
psychological trauma and physical brain trauma. He has successfully treated victims of
closed head injury, stroke, post-traumatic stress, depression, and addiction. Many of
these patients had conditions which were very resistant to treatment with other
interventions.
If Dr. Ochs hypothesis is true, then the EDF and all other brain
wave retraining devices either activate the proper inhibitory enzyme reuptake mechanism,
or they disrupt the seizure inhibition responses which have taken over as the day to day
standard for neurochemical functioning.
In either case, brain-wave training would be helping because it
allows the brain to reset itself to its normal unimpaired state of functioning. The
brain-wave training would not be directly repairing what is impaired, but would be
enabling the brain to heal itself (Ochs,1993).
The observations and speculations of Ochs, Patterson and Capel
provide some insight into why such "physical therapy" for the brain may work.
They illustrate why we might be as effective using brain wave training to improve some
individual elements of functioning, such as memory, as well as working on broad fields of
impaired functioning such as depression, head injury, addiction, ADHD, ect..
The Peniston Protocol
Perhaps the most famous research to date using EEG biofeedback
training has been the work of Peniston and Kulkosky for their procedure, the Penniston
protocol. Peniston and Kulkosky used alpha-theta brain-wave training to increase the
amount and amplitude of the subjects alpha and theta brain waves.
Dr. Eugene Peniston and Dr. Paul Kulkosky randomly assigned
alcoholics to a control group which received conventional medical treatment (Minnesota
Model (12 Step)), and an experimental group for which the only interventions were fifteen
twenty minute sessions of Alpha-Theta brain wave training. They also included in the study
a second control group of non-alcoholics. The results sent a shockwave through every
segment of the alcohol treatment community aware of the study (Hutchison, 1994).
The control group, who received traditional medical treatment,
demonstrated an 80 percent relapse rate during the thirteen month post treatment follow-up
period. The experimental group, who received 15 twenty minute brain- wave training (BWT)
sessions (and no other treatment) demonstrated only a 20 percent relapse rate during the
same follow-up period. "Depression, as indexed by Becks's Depression Inventory, was
significantly reduced to control (nonalcoholic) level after BWT" (Peniston, &
Kulkosky, 1989, p. 276). The alcoholic control group did not demonstrate any significant
change in depression as measured by Beck's Depression Inventory.
Lack of Success with Standard Medical Treatment
Only a twenty percent success rate with traditional intervention
techniques in the Peniston & Kulkosky study is not an unusual finding on the
effectiveness of currently available alcohol treatment.
At the Washington University Department of Psychiatry, John Helzer
and colleagues concluded in their study that "Less than 10 percent of those treated
specifically for alcoholism survived and were not drinking alcoholically five to eight
years after receiving treatment" (Peele, 1989, p. 78).
In a study of the Minnesota Model at Cambridge following up 100
patients across eight years, researchers concluded "there is compelling evidence that
the results of our treatment were no better than the natural history of the disease"
(Peele, 1989, p. 74).
Peniston and Kulkosky also note that "major outcome studies
that have used specific therapeutic interventions such as controlled drinking, abstinence,
compulsory AA attendance, and an active follow-up program yielded results after 2 and 8
years that were no better than those of the natural history of the disorder"
(Peniston, & Kulkosky, 1989, p. 271).
Advantage of Brain-wave training Over Standard Medical Treatment
If alcoholism does involve impaired brain function, then the above
statistics and results would not be surprising. The subjects who received the traditional
medical treatment are fighting against there own physiology, whereas those who are
receiving the alpha-theta brain-wave training are not.
Beta-endorphine has been linked to internal control mechanisms for
eating and ethanol consumption (Peniston, & Kulkosky, 1989). Based upon an existing
literature, Peniston and Kulkosky observe, "If Beta-endorphin is elevated in
alcoholics, a return to consumption of ethanol calories would be inevitable"
(Peniston, & Kulkosky, 1989, p. 276).
Peniston and Kulkosky did find significantly elevated levels of
beta-endorphine in the group who received traditional medical treatment. They did not find
elevated levels of beta-endorphine in the group who received the brain-wave training.
Just as a painter with no arms must struggle to overcome the
limitations of his physiology to pursue what he wants to do, so might an alcoholic need to
struggle against his physiology to pursue his own choices for his life. Within the
traditional model of treatment, a basic physiological impediment is not being addressed.
According to the findings of Peniston & Kulkosky, that basic physiological impediment
is being addressed with brain-wave training; a physiological impediment addressed not with
drug therapy, but with a non-invasive technique which allows elevated brain chemistry to
return to normal values. This is a technique which in essence allows the brain to heal
itself.
The implications of the Penniston protocol are not just for the
alcoholic, but also for any victim of the class of impaired brain functioning Dr. Ochs
discusses. Under his model anyone with impaired neurochemistry (such as elevated
beta-endorphine) would receive the same benefit of normalized brain chemistry after the
brain-wave training.
EEG Beta Brain-wave training
While the Peniston protocol focuses on Alpha and Theta brain-wave
training, other researchers have been looking into the benefits of using brain-wave
training for beta frequencies. Beta training is another brain-wave training technique
which trains the subjects to increase the amplitude and frequency of their mid-range beta
frequencies. Beta training has been found to be an effective tool for treating ADHD and
dyslexia (Hutchison, 1994, p. 360) and would seem to be significant particularly in the
area of education.
In a controlled study, (Dr. Siegried) Othmer has found that this
beta training produces average IQ increases of 23 percent. In cases where the starting IQ
value was lower than 100, the average IQ increase was 33 points. Othmer has also found
dramatic improvements in visual retention and auditory memory, and the subjects showed
major gains in reading and arithmetic. In a one-year follow-up study, the trainees showed
major improvements in self-esteem and concentration and significant improvements in such
areas as handwriting, school grades, sleep, irritability, organization, hyperactivity,
verbal expression, and headaches...Amazingly the improvements seem to be permanent.
(Hutchison, 1994, p. 360-361).
These results warrant further research and beckon for educational
application. How many special education classes and special education students could
benefit from significant improvements in levels of hyperactivity, irritability,
organization, and self-esteem? How many mainstream classes and students would appreciate
and benefit from increased auditory memory and visual retention, IQ gains of 23 percent
and improvements in verbal expression, reading and arithmetic? Pursuit of beta brain-wave
training is clearly warranted for its potential to help students and teachers alike in
achieving the goals of quality education.
Barriers of Cost to EEG Brainwave Training
As a tool to facilitate education, Beta training would seem to
hold the same promise as alpha-theta training does for alcoholism. Indeed considering the
proliferation of destructive drug use among current student populations, alpha-theta
training might also be of significant interest in an educational setting. Unfortunately,
in an educational environment financial resources limit making available EEG biofeedback
brain-wave training to those who could benefit from it.
A major limitation in the application of EEG biofeedback training
has been the cost of the equipment and the limited context under which it can be used. It
is hard to imagine a classroom where all twenty students are seated with electrodes on
their heads and a biofeedback therapist attending to each of them. Even as a lab where the
students may go for one period a day, the cost would be prohibitive. The EEG biofeedback
equipment can cost between $4,000 and $20,000 (Hutchison, 1994) per machine. Furthermore,
EEG biofeedback requires the one on one attention of highly trained personnel. Cost for
the therapists and equipment precludes EEG biofeedback training from practical use for
most educational settings.
Alternatives to EEG Biofeedback Training
Fortunately, EEG biofeedback training is not the only way to
accomplish the EEG training. Audio and visual driving of brain wave frequencies without a
feedback loop has been found to be an effective method of performing the same brain-wave
training. Currently available to the public for prices ranging from $99 to $350 (Tools for
Exploration Vol. V, No. 2 Summer/Fall 1994), are Light and Sound (LS) machines.
These devices use audio and photic driving to alter the users
brain waves to the desired frequency and amplitude patterns. Dr. Ochs EEG biofeedback
device uses an LS machine as the part of the equipment which drives the alterations in
brain-wave frequencies. His device becomes a form of EEG BWT because of the feedback loop
through the computer and EEG machine.
An LS machine consist of set of headphones, blackout glasses with
small lights placed over each eye, and a small computer. The computer controls the strobe
frequency of the lights, matching them with the frequency of auditory monaural and
binaural beats. The LS machines are not only cheaper to purchase than EEG BWT training
equipment, but are also cheaper to operate. Unlike EEG biofeedback BWT training they do
not require the one on one attention of highly trained personnel (Hutchison, 1994).
Comparable Results with Light and Sound Brain-wave Training and EEG Brain-wave
Training
Russell, and Carter, have been using LS brain-wave training with
learning disabled (LD), and ADHD children for beta brain-wave training (Russell &
Carter, 1990). The purpose of the LS beta training is to increase the amplitude and
frequency of beta brain wave activity in the frontal lobes. ADHD has been found to be
"linked to abnormally slow brain-wave activity in specific parts of the brain,
including the premotor cortex and the superior prefrontal cortex, which are used when
people pay attention, or keep still" (Hutchison, 1994, p. 358).
A significant difference in the verbal and performance subtests of
the Weschler Intelligence Scale for Children is a diagnostic indicator of possible
organicity, ADHD or learning disability (Aiken, 1988). What Dr. Russell and Dr. Howard
noted in their LD or ADHD subjects was that whichever subtest was suppressed in the
pre-test was significantly raised in the post-test (after the Beta training).
Groups that began with low verbal IQ scores had pronounced gains
in verbal IQ, spelling, and arithmetic. Groups that began with high verbal but low
performance IQ showed significant gains in non-verbal IQ, reading, spelling and
memory...they concluded that the degree of significant improvement in functioning is
related to the number of treatment sessions. (Hutchison, 1994, p. 362)
It can be seen that this intervention is normalizing the spread of
the WISC subtest scores and apparently following Dr. Ochs hypothesis. The brain-wave
training is permitting an individual with impaired functioning to be normalized and enter
a state of unimpaired functioning on measures normally associated with organicity.
Russell and Carter suggest that use of LS devices and EEG training
"may stimulate either the successful establishing of new neural pathways in the brain
or re- establishing of old pathways that have been disrupted" (Hutchison, 1994, p.
363).
The re-establishment of old disrupted neural pathways sounds in
essence the same as the primary mode of action for brain wave training hypothesized by
Ochs. But if beta, and perhaps all brain-wave training, is doing more than just
re-establishing old pathways (if it is actually creating new neural pathways as Russell
and Carter suggest) then might it also be of value to expand normal mental capacities?
In the study of ADHD children conducted by Russell and Carter,
significant increases in IQ scores were noted as the result of beta training raising the
depressed subtest on the WISC. Othmer also found in his beta training biofeedback that
ADHD subjects IQ scores rose significantly. These were both populations with impaired
functioning whose rise in IQ scores can be viewed as the probable result of gaining an
unimpaired level of functioning where before there had been an impaired level of
functioning.
But if beta, and perhaps all brain wave training, is actually
creating new neural pathways as a secondary mode of action, and if, as a tertiary mode of
action, is stimulating the production of beneficial neurotransmitters as suggested by the
work of Dr. Meg Patterson and Dr. Ifor Capel, then it would be reasonable to assume that
brain-wave training might actually increase the level of functioning of an unimpaired
subject.
Cranial Electrical Stimulation
Research suggestive of just such a hypothesis may be found in the
investigation of cranial electrical stimulation (CES). CES is a technique which introduces
the desirable frequencies by low level electrical currents applied to the cranium. The
medical college at the University of Wisconsin conducted a study on a commercially
available CES device, the BT-5. The purpose of the study was to determine if the BT-5
would reduce student anxiety during final exams. The unexpected results were increases in
IQ by twenty to thirty points and a conclusion by the researchers that the "BT-5
(CES) stimulation appears to enhance neural efficiency..." (Ostrander &
Schroeder, 1991, pp. 265-266).
As with the other forms of brain wave training, CES has a history
of research showing significant improvements in individuals with an impaired level of
functioning. Like the Peniston protocol, CES brain wave training has had profound
beneficial effects on the impaired mental and social functioning of alcoholics and
addicts. CES has enabled some addicts and alcoholics to go cold turkey without any
withdrawal symptoms, apparently through the stimulation of the production of beneficial
endorphins (Ostrander & Schroeder, 1991). CES brain wave training has been found to be
effective in the treatment of impaired short term memory in alcoholics. With severe
alcoholism, it can take as long as eight years of total abstinence before short term
memory returns to its unimpaired level of functioning. With CES brain wave training, it
can take as little as five days (Ostrander & Schroeder, 1991).
If neural efficiency is increased, if new neural pathways can be
created and if an impaired state of homeostatic functioning can be reset to a fully
functional one, then all of these technologies and interventions represent a staggering
opportunity to improve the opportunities and quality of life for broad populations of
individuals through brain-wave training.
The results that Russell and Carter have obtained with a form of
beta brain-wave training which does not involve EEG biofeedback is apparently of the same
calibre as Othmer has received with beta brain-wave training involving EEG biofeedback.
The demonstrated effectiveness of both approaches validates that one does not need the EEG
feedback loop for the brain-wave training to be effective.
This demonstration of comparable results means that the
significant potential of brain-wave training does not have to be limited by the fiscal
constraints of EEG biofeedback brain-wave training. Despite the lowered cost of the LS
brain-wave training devices verses the EEG biofeedback equipment, the LS machines are
expensive enough that in an educational setting access may be a significant problem.
There is one other more cost effective method of conducting
brain-wave training: binaural- beat audio signals. In the LS machines, the brain waves are
altered through the use of light and sound drivers. In binaural-beat audio signal
brain-wave training, only sound driving is used to alter brain waves.
Binaural-beat audio signals are the final technology we will
discuss and the technology under investigation in this study.
Binaural-Beat Audio Signals
Binaural-beat signals utilize a powerful form of audio driving to
alter brain- wave frequencies. In specific forms of intervention, frequencies could be
presented to individuals for brain-ave training in essentially the same manner as LS brain
wave training.
Binaural-beats signals (BBS's) were first observed by the German
scientist H.W. Dove in 1839. In its simplest form BBS's consist of two pure tones of
different pitch being presented to each ear. Before the advent of electronic occilators,
researchers used tuning forks to produce the tones. Heard in the open air (monaural
beats), the sound will wax and wane due to wave interference. A subject can hear these
monaural beats with just one ear if need be. Binaural beats occur when the tones are
presented separately to each ear. The sound no longer waxes and wanes in the room, but is
heard inside the subject's head as a tone synthesized by the brain which does not exist
outside of the subject's head (Oster, 1973).
The brain synthesizes the two sounds into a single experienced
tone which seems to originate from the center of the subjects head. The synthesizing of
the two tones into one experienced tone produces a phenomena known as hemispheric
synchronization, where the electrical activity of the two hemispheres of the brain unite
into a single synchronous pattern with an overall frequency at the frequency of the
difference between the two original tones. If the difference between the two tones matches
a particular brain wave state, such as 4-8 Hz (Theta), then the overall brain activity
will tend to match that frequency, and hence enter that brain wave state. This phenomena
is referred to as the Frequency-Following Response (FFR) and is a powerful form of
brai-wnave entrainment (Edrington, & Allen, 1985). The FFR can easily take a subject
into Beta, Alpha, Theta, or Delta brain wave states and help them maintain those states.
By using only audio stimulation for brain wave training, the
financial access to the benefits of brain-wave training is improved. Equipment is reduced
to a simple tape and personal stereo tape player. In the classroom, access is improved by
use of open air speakers which prevents the subjects from having to wear any equipment at
all and thus does not interfere with the normal structure of a class (Edrington, 1985).
But are BBS's as effective as other means of brain-wave training? In an educational
setting, if one did want to facilitate memory and learning, how effective would BBS's be?
Existing research has shown that teachers who have used BBS's in
their classrooms have reported a decrease in student distractibility and an increase in
academic performance (Owens, 1984). A study conducted with an introductory psychology
class found significantly higher scores in the experimental group on five out of six tests
(Edrington 1983). A study conducted at a government training center found an increase in
scores by 30% for Morse code students (Waldkoetter, 1982a) and 75% on mental-motor skills
(Waldkoetter, 1982b) using BBS's in addition to standard teaching procedures. The US Army
has also reported positive results in using BBS's, in this case to improve acquisition of
a second language (Pawelek, & Larson). Such findings would seem to indicate that in
these settings the BBS's are an effective and worthwhile intervention for improving a
student's educational level functioning.
Variables in This Study
The Independent variable was the presence of BBS's on the
instrumental music tape the experimental group listens to; and the absence of the BBS's on
the same instrumental music tape heard by the control group.
Four dependent variables were used to obtain more data on the
types of memory facilitated by BBS's. These dependent variables were tests administered to
50 undergraduate students of West Georgia College. The students were randomly assigned
with a double-blind methodology to the experimental or control groups. Each student
listened to a tape of music (Independent Variable) while being administered a free recall
word list test, a novel word recognition/recall test, and two subtests of the WAIS-R (the
digit symbol, and digit span). The four tests administered were the Dependent Variables
measuring an effect of the Independent Variable on memory.
For the purposes of this study, memory will be defined as
"the ability to reproduce or recount information that was experienced at an earlier
time" (Domjan, M., & Burkhard, B., 1982, p. 308). Operationally, memory will be
defined by the subject's ability to reproduce on each of four subtests the information
that was presented to them. The more information a subject is able to reproduce, the
higher the subject's score on that test, and the more "memory" that will be
considered to have been recorded.
Based upon the existing research, I hypothesized that the
experimental group would display a statistically significant improvement in recall over
the control group. I made this hypothesis on the basis of the success of previous less
rigorous studies on BBS's and on the basis of the success of other forms of beta
brain-wave training in the facilitation of human memory and learning.
Purpose and Rationale of This Study
None of the previous research on BBS's have provided adequate
controls for other variables, which might account for the improvement in performance on
memory and learning tasks. Improvements in memory have been demonstrated with proper
controls with other forms of brain-wave training, but this data is lacking for
binaural-beat signals. This study is a step toward filling in that gap.
Were the observed results with binaural-beat signals in previous
research the result of placebo effects, a confounding variable or the binaural-beat
signals? If the BBS's do facilitate memory, do they also facilitate an increased ability
to attend as reported by Edrington?
This study is an attempt to demonstrate, in a repeatable manner,
the facilitation of memory with the use of BBS's under conditions which attempt to control
for confounding variables.
METHOD
Subjects
50 undergraduate students at West Georgia College participated in
the study. Some, if not most of the students participated for extra credit, or to meet a
course requirement. Five graduate students also participated in the study but the results
of their tests were discarded to prevent skewing of the results.
Design
A between-groups design, also known as an independent subject
design was used in the study. Subjects were randomly assigned with a double-blind
methodology to experimental and control groups. A .05 or less significance level was used
to determine whether or not to accept the null hypothesis (p>.05) or reject it
(p<=.05) in favor of the research hypothesis.
The experimental group contained 27 subjects who were presented
with a music tape bearing binaural-beat audio signals while performing four different
learning tasks.
The control group contained 23 subjects who performed the same
four learning tasks as the experimental group. The music tape that the control group
listened to did not contain the BBSs but was otherwise identical to the tape the
experimental group was presented with.
Latin Squares
In order to counterbalance any effect of practice or fatigue, the
order of the four learning tasks was presented on a rotating basis known as "Latin
Squares" (Puff, 1982). This was done to insure the even distribution of any carryover
effects from one learning task to another.
Subject five was returned to the test order presented for subject
one, subject six the same as subject two, ect.. Each group had its own supply of test
packets. This was to maintain rotation of the learning tasks within each group to ensure
the even distribution across subjects of any carryover effects from one task to another.
Apparatus
The Independent Variable
The Binaural Beat Source used in the study for beta brain- wave
training were provided by The Monroe Institute. There were two tapes, an instrumental
music tape for the control group, and the same tape with BBS's for the experimental group.
The presence or absence of the binaural-beat audio signals was the Independent Variable.
The tapes were presented via headphones and stereo tape player at
a low volume. The researcher maintained control over the tape volume to prevent any
possible confounding of the results by varied volume levels.
The Dependent Variables
The subjects were presented with four different learning tasks:
word list recall (appendix B), German vocabulary list recognition/recall (appendix C), and
from the WAIS-R (1981) the Digit Span, and Digit Symbol subtests. There are 25 items on
both the word list recall, and the German language vocabulary recognition/recall. The
scores on the Digit Span and Digit Symbol subtests were scaled by age in accordance with
the procedures given in the WAIS-R manual. These four subtests were the dependent
variables in the study.
Procedure
Informed Consent of Research Subjects
The experimenter presented each subject with a consent form in
compliance with the West Georgia Institutional Review Board procedure for research with
human subjects. Each subject was instructed to completely read the consent form, including
the description of the experiment, before signing and proceeding with their participation
in the study.
It was explained to the subjects that the purpose of the
experiment was to determine what effect, if any, listening to these tapes at a low volume
has on memory tasks. It was explained that the tapes do not contain any subliminal
messages, that there will be four separate memory tasks, and that the whole process should
take no more than 45 minutes.
The subjects were also informed that if they were interested in
the results of the study or their personal scores, those would be available to them after
the completion of the study.
Each subject was instructed to ask the experimenter if they had
any questions, and if not, to sign the consent form if they were still interested in
participating in the study.
Assignment of Subjects and Pre-Test Period
Each subject was then randomly assigned to the control or
experimental group by a coin toss. The tapes were labeled K1 and K2 for experimental and
control group respectively. A result of heads resulted in the subject being assigned to
K1, and a result of tails in their being assigned to K2. At the time of the collection of
the data, neither the experimenter nor subject knew which tape was for the experimental
group, and which was for the control group.
Once the subject was assigned to a group, the appropriate tape was
placed in the tape player, and the subject was asked to listen to the tape for fifteen
minutes. The fifteen minute period of listening to the tape was to allow time for the
entrainment of the brain waves of the subjects in the experimental group.
While the subject was listening to the tape their name was placed
on a list for their professor if they were participating in the study for extra-credit.
They were given a subject number which was placed on the front of their test packet. Each
test packet was also marked for the sex of the subject, position in latin square rotation,
and group.
Presentation of the Four Tests
At the end of the fifteen minutes of listening to the tape, each
subject was instructed to continue listening to the tape while being presented with each
of the four subtests. Each subject was presented with the learning tasks in as uniform a
manner as possible.
The Word List Recall Test
For the word list recall subtest (appendix B), the subject was
told, "I would like you to take two minutes and look at the words I am about to give
you. When I say "stop" please turn the sheet over. I will provide you with a
second sheet of paper on which I would like for you to reproduce as many of the words as
you can. After five minutes I will again say "stop," at which time I would like
for you to stop working. If you have any questions I can repeat these instructions, would
you like for me to do that, or do you want to proceed?"
If needed the researcher repeated the instructions. When the
subject indicated their understanding of the directions the researcher stated, "Ok,
let's proceed." The researcher then presented the subject with the word list, and
timed for three minutes. At the end of three minutes the researcher stated
"stop," and replaced the word list with a blank piece of paper. At the end of
five minutes the researcher again stated "stop," and collected the recalled list
from the subject.
The German Vocabulary Recognition/Recall Test
For the German vocabulary recognition/recall list (appendix C),
the subject was told "I would like you to take three minutes and look at the words
and definitions I am about to give you. When I say "stop" please turn the sheet
over. I will provide you with a second sheet of paper on which I would like for you to
fill as many definitions of the words as you can. After three minutes I will again say
"stop," at which time I would like for you to stop working. If you have any
questions I can repeat these instructions. Would you like for me to do that, or do you
want to proceed?" If requested to do so, the researcher repeated the instructions.
When the subject indicated their understanding of the directions
the researcher stated, "Ok, let's proceed." The researcher then presented the
subject with the German vocabulary recognition/recall list and timed for three minutes. At
the end of three minutes the researcher stated "stop" and placed a list of the
words without definitions in front of the subject while retrieving the original word and
definition list. At the end of five minutes the researcher again stated "stop,"
and collected the recalled list from the subject.
The Digit Span and Digit Symbol Tests
The experimenter presented the Digit Span and Digit Symbol
subtests in accordance with standard test administration procedures for the Wechsler Adult
Intelligence Scale, as outlined in the WAIS-R manual.
Scoring of Tests
The Word List Recall and the German vocabulary recognition/recall
tests were scored with one point being assigned for each correct answer. These were 25
item tests yielding a possible score of 0 to 25 points for each subject.
The Digit Symbol and Digit Span subtests of the WAIS-R were scored
and scaled before being analyzed, in accordance with the procedures outlined in the WAIS-R
manual.
Limitations
In an attempt eliminate confounding variables a simple
posttest-only design was employed. Each subject was seen in a single interview to be
assigned to a group, be exposed to one of the two levels of the independent variable, and
finally to have the effect of the independent variable measured. While this design
maximized the isolation of the independent variable it did not provide the independent
variable an opportunity to exert a cumulative effect upon the dependent variable.
This is an important limitation in this study because of the noted
cumulative effect of brain-wave training. Russell and Carter observed "that the
degree of significant improvement in functioning is related to the number of treatment
sessions" (Hutchinson, 1994, p. 362). Peniston and Kulkosky also note "Time
course analysis of the EEG effects of brain-wave training revealed that increases in alpha
and theta rhythms occurred gradually across the 15 treatment sessions" (Peniston,
& Kulkosky, 1989 p. 276).
The studies which evaluated student performance over a period of
weeks or months have had the benefit of the cumulative effect of brain-wave training. The
cumulative effect of the binaural-beat audio signals is a part of the brain-wave training
process which was not included in the design of this study and may have a significant
impact on the strength of the response as measured by the dependent variable.
This study did not provide for repeated exposures to the dependent
variable due to limitations in resources. A logical next step might be to conduct this
study again with a longitudinal dimension to observe any increase of performance across
repeated sessions, and to observe the effect of binaural audio signals on learning as well
as memory.
Placebo and suggestion effects were deliberately filtered out with
a double-blind design, in order to gain clarity on what role the layered binaural-beat
audio signals play in the positive results obtained with binaural-beat audio signals. Some
of the positive results of previous studies may have been the result of just such effects,
thus the positive results of this study may not be as profound as in previous research.
RESULTS
There were four hypothesis used in this research, each postulating
that in a study controlling for confounding variables the experimental group would display
a statistically significant improvement in mean scores over the control group at a .05 or
less significance level.
Hypothesis one (H1) postulated a statistically significant higher
mean score for the experimental group as measured by a 25 item word list recall test.
Hypothesis two (H2) postulated a statistically significant higher mean score for the
experimental group as measured by a 25 item word list recall/recognition test. Hypothesis
three (H3) postulated a statistically significant higher mean score for the experimental
group as measured by the WAIS-R digit symbol subtest. Hypothesis four (H4) postulated a
statistically significant higher mean score for the experimental group as measured by the
WAIS-R digit span subtest.
In reviewing the data the experimental group does display
statistically significant higher mean scores on three of the four dependent measures,
allowing for the rejection of the null hypothesis for H1, H3, and H4. The obtained data
does not allow for the rejection of the null hypothesis with H2. Figures one through four
display the mean scores with histograms and significance level.
Word List Free Recall Results
On the Word List Recall subtest, the control group displayed a
mean score of 14 correct responses, and the experimental group displayed a mean score of
15.93 correct responses out of a possible 25. When evaluated with a t-test for the
statistical significance of the result, the value of t(2.5) is found to fall between a
probability of .02 and .01 (df=48). Since this is less than the minimum significance level
of .05, the result is considered statistically significant.
Word List Recognition Results
On the Word List Recognition subtest, the control group had a mean
score of 12.61 correct responses, and the experimental group had a mean score of 15.04
correct responses out of a possible 25. When evaluated with a t-test for the statistical
significance of the result, the value of t(1.76) is found to fall between a probability of
.10 and .05 (df=48). Since this is greater than the minimum significance level of .05 the
result is not considered statistically significant.
Digit Symbol Results
The scaled Digit Symbol subtest displayed a mean score of 9.46 for
the control group, and a mean score of 11.44 for the experimental group. When evaluated
with a t-test for the statistical significance of the result, the value of t(2.83) was
found to be greater than the critical value for a probability of .01 (df=48). Since this
is less than the minimum significance level of .05, the result is considered statistically
significant.
Digit Span Results
The scaled Digit Span subtest displayed a mean score of 7.69 for
the control group and 9.85 for the experimental group. When evaluated with a t-test for
the statistical significance of the result, the value of t(2.4) was found to fall between
a probability of .02 and .01(df=48). Since this is less than the minimum significance
level of .05, the result is considered statistically significant.
DISCUSSION
For H1 the Word List Recall test, H3 the Digit Symbol test, and H4
the Digit Span tests, the data does permit the rejection of the null hypothesis in favor
of the research hypothesis. For H2 the Word List Recognition test, the data does not allow
for the rejection of the null hypothesis.
The data does support binaural-beat audio signals facilitating
memory as measured by the word list recall test. The results of the digit span and digit
symbol tests support the reports of Edrington, who found a decrease in student
hyperactivity and an increased ability to pay attention in class while using BBS's.
It is reasonable to infer, given the current data, that
beta-frequency BBS's are helpful for those individuals seeking help in free recall memory,
attention and completion of routine tasks.
The Four Dependent Variables
The Word List Recall is a simple free recall test, and thus was
considered by the experimenter to be the core dependent variable for examining any
facilitation of memory with binaural-beat audio signals. The facilitation of memory as
measured by higher mean scores on this test in the experimental group demonstrate that
binaural-beat audio signal beta brain-wave training did facilitate memory.
The German vocabulary recognition list is more of a combined free
recall and cued recall task and was also expected to be facilitated by the beta-frequency
BBS's. Surprisingly the results for this subtest did not show a statistically significant
increase in memory as the other three subtests did.
Since a Latin Squares rotation of the tests was used, this data is
not the result of the order of presentation.
The results may mean that the associative memory mechanisms behind
remembering the meanings for a novel set of words were not reinforced as strongly as the
mechanisms behind the pure recall of a word list.
These results are not expected to be a reflection of previous
knowledge of German by some of the subjects. All subjects stated that they did not know
German, and the words used were not similar in sound to the English equivalent.
Given that previous work in the comparable task of second language
acquisition has reported success with BBS improving performance (Pawelek, & Larson,
1985), the lack of statistically significant mean scores may be an artifact of the single
session limitations of this study. As noted in the limitations section, brain-wave
training has been shown to increase in effectiveness with repeated sessions.
It would be interesting to see if the data from administering a
foreign language vocabulary test would have statistically significant outcomes in a
longitudinal study, which would provide for a repeated exposures to beta-frequency BBS
brain-wave training.
The Digit Span subtest is not only an indication of an ability to
recall and repeat back a series of rote numerical digits, but also of an individuals
ability to attend. The increase in Digit Span should be of interest for assisting those
populations, such as ADHD, with an impaired ability to maintain their attention on rote
memory tasks.
This data supports the anecdotal reports of teachers and other
professionals who have reported an increased ability to attend (or a decrease in student
distractibility) among their students when using binaural-beat audio signals (Edrington,
1985). The binaural-beat audio signals should, as reported by Edrington, reported, be of
use in the classroom to increase the students' ability to attend to the lesson and
instructor at hand.
The Digit Symbol test is timed, and the more the subject must look
up the meaning of a symbol, the less time he has for filling out the meanings. Heightened
memory should facilitate higher scores on this test due to less time spent going back to
the list of symbols and their numerical equivalents.
However, the Digit Symbol subtest is not characterized in
psychological assessment as a memory test, but as a performance subtest, measuring the
subject's ability to persevere at routine tasks.
The increase in performance of the experimental group over the
control group at this task may be significant in its implications for assisting those
populations who have academic difficulty due to an impaired ability to persevere at
routine motor tasks, such as an ADHD child.
Relation of Obtained Results with Previous Research
The results support the ability of BBS's to function as an
effective stand alone form of brain-wave training. The research does provide support for
the observations of teachers who have reported increased grades and fewer behavioral
problems with their students while utilizing binaural-beat audio in the classroom.
The data is able to support the conclusions of previous research
that binaural-beat audio signals increase a subject's ability to perform free recall
tasks, attend (reduced student distractibility) and persevere at routine tasks (as
measured by the Digit Span and Digit Symbol subtests); three important dimensions for
success in the classroom.
The beta-frequency BBS brain-wave training did have a positive
impact on dimensions of mental performance known to be impaired in ADHD. This opens the
possibility that beta frequency BBS's may yield comparable results to the beta frequency
brain-wave training conducted with EEG biofeedback and light and sound machines.
The results for the German vocabulary recognition/recall list are
not able to support the data on a similar task as reported by Pawelek and Larson in the
BBS facilitation of second language acquisition. This may be an artifact of the number of
brain-wave training sessions used. It would be interesting to see if the data from
administering a foreign language vocabulary test would have statistically significant
outcomes in a longitudinal study.
A secondary question of the study was the effect of beta frequency
BBS on attention. Could BBS's be used to help ADHD populations? Striking research exists
with other forms of brain-wave training (Othmer, Russell, & Carter) facilitating
improved performance in ADHD populations. While this study was not designed to answer the
question of how effective beta frequency BBS's could be with ADHD subjects, its design was
organized to look at one element of ADHD; attention.
In order to gain clarity on the relevance of binaural-beat
brain-wave training for use with ADHD populations, the digit span and digit symbol
subtests of the WAIS-R were administered. The two WAIS-R subtests were included in the
study in order to determine if binaural-beat audio signals could facilitate the ability to
attend and persevere at routine motor tasks. Statistically significant results on the free
recall word list test, digit span, and digit symbol tests, provide support for the
conclusion that beta-frequency BBS's do facilitate improved attention. By inference the
BBS form of brain-wave training should be helpful to ADHD subjects. Based upon the success
of biofeedback brain- wave training, non-empirical BBS research and this study, further
research seems warranted in applied empirical follow-up studies on the facilitation of
memory with beta-frequency BBS's among both mainstream and ADHD populations.
Recommendations
It would be rewarding to pursue the effect of binaural-beat audio
signals into broader applications. Of particular interest would be the use of
binaural-beat audio signals to help ADHD and unimpaired students function at a higher
level in mainstream classes.
Another study seems to be in order to properly address the
question of whether or not the BBS's can facilitate learning as well as memory. The
differentiation being that learning refers to "enduring effects of prior
experience" (Domjan, & Burkhard, 1982, p. 309) and memory may be a short lived
effect of prior experience. An empirical longitudinal investigation of BBS brain-wave
training on learning would clarify the applicability of the BBS brain-wave training
technology toward learning in normal and ADHD populations.
Due to the unexpected lack of significant results with the German
vocabulary recognition/recall list, a longitudinal study with foreign language vocabulary
recognition/recall lists would be of interest. Such a study could determine if this is a
task not facilitated by beta frequency BBS brain-wave training, or if it is facilitated
only with repeated brain-wave sessions.
Finally it would be of interest to investigate alpha-theta BBS
brain-wave training in the treatment of alcoholism and drug abuse. If the results of such
a study find comparable benefits to the Peniston protocol, then the social and educational
impact would be wide ranging. Access to an effective intervention may be opened up to the
alcoholic or addict student. A student may be able to simply go to the school counselor's
office to receive effective, lasting treatment for an acute social and educational
impairment.
Conclusions
Having found binaural-beat audio signals to be an effective method
of facilitating memory on three of the four dependent variables in this study, it may be
inferred that they are a viable form of brain-wave training and could provide a portable
inexpensive method of assisting students and other individuals in memory tasks. This
suggests that the observed results with binaural-beat signals in previous research were
the result of the binaural-beat signals and not the result of placebo effects or a
confounding variable. Order
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Binaural-beat audio signal brain-wave training could provide a
cost effective non- drug alternative to those individuals and educational systems seeking
to augment standard techniques. Not only special populations, but mainstream education
could benefit from making widely available a form of brain-wave training which makes the
learning environment more enjoyable and productive.
It is hoped that this research demonstrated binaural-beat audio
signal brain-wave training as a viable alternative to other more expensive and cumbersome
methods of brain-wave training. Furthermore, it is hoped that this project will have layed
part of the groundwork for more conclusive applied studies with binaural-beat brain-wave
training in a variety of student populations and educational environments. Continuing
applied research in brain-wave training holds promise to have a profound positive impact
on the learning disabled, special education classes and the educational system in general.
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