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Lightening the mind with audiovisual stimulation as an accessible alternative to breath-focused meditation for mood and cognitive enhancement

October 26th, 2024
California, United States
This paper demonstrates that a novel audiovisual stimulation technique can improve mood and cognition on the level of breath-focused meditation. These results are part of a growing body of literature that shows that flickering auditory and visual stimuli can affect the mind in currently unknown ways.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-75943-8
Posted byBarak Reibman

Abstract/Description

In this randomized, controlled, and double-blind experiment with a relatively large sample (n = 262), a novel technique of audiovisual stimulation (AVS) was demonstrated to substantially improve self-reported mood states by reducing several negative affects, including anxiety and depression, and enhancing performance on mood-sensitive cognitive tasks. Most of the AVS effects were highly similar whether binaural beats were present or not and regardless of the duration of experience. Remarkably, the mood benefits from AVS closely aligned with those achieved through breath-focused meditation with additional evidence that a brief AVS exposure of approximately five minutes may be sufficient or even optimal for improving mood to a comparable or greater degree than meditation sessions of equal or longer durations (11–22 min). These exciting findings position AVS as a promising avenue for mood and cognition enhancement and a potentially more accessible “plug-and-play” alternative to meditation, which is especially relevant considering the high attrition rates commonly observed in meditation practices.