US3884218A - Method of inducing and maintaining various stages of sleep in the human being - Google Patents
Method of inducing and maintaining various stages of sleep in the human being Download PDFInfo
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- US3884218A US3884218A US076923A US7692370A US3884218A US 3884218 A US3884218 A US 3884218A US 076923 A US076923 A US 076923A US 7692370 A US7692370 A US 7692370A US 3884218 A US3884218 A US 3884218A
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- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61M—DEVICES FOR INTRODUCING MEDIA INTO, OR ONTO, THE BODY; DEVICES FOR TRANSDUCING BODY MEDIA OR FOR TAKING MEDIA FROM THE BODY; DEVICES FOR PRODUCING OR ENDING SLEEP OR STUPOR
- A61M21/00—Other devices or methods to cause a change in the state of consciousness; Devices for producing or ending sleep by mechanical, optical, or acoustical means, e.g. for hypnosis
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- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61B—DIAGNOSIS; SURGERY; IDENTIFICATION
- A61B5/00—Measuring for diagnostic purposes; Identification of persons
- A61B5/24—Detecting, measuring or recording bioelectric or biomagnetic signals of the body or parts thereof
- A61B5/316—Modalities, i.e. specific diagnostic methods
- A61B5/369—Electroencephalography [EEG]
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- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61B—DIAGNOSIS; SURGERY; IDENTIFICATION
- A61B5/00—Measuring for diagnostic purposes; Identification of persons
- A61B5/24—Detecting, measuring or recording bioelectric or biomagnetic signals of the body or parts thereof
- A61B5/316—Modalities, i.e. specific diagnostic methods
- A61B5/369—Electroencephalography [EEG]
- A61B5/372—Analysis of electroencephalograms
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- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61M—DEVICES FOR INTRODUCING MEDIA INTO, OR ONTO, THE BODY; DEVICES FOR TRANSDUCING BODY MEDIA OR FOR TAKING MEDIA FROM THE BODY; DEVICES FOR PRODUCING OR ENDING SLEEP OR STUPOR
- A61M21/00—Other devices or methods to cause a change in the state of consciousness; Devices for producing or ending sleep by mechanical, optical, or acoustical means, e.g. for hypnosis
- A61M2021/0005—Other devices or methods to cause a change in the state of consciousness; Devices for producing or ending sleep by mechanical, optical, or acoustical means, e.g. for hypnosis by the use of a particular sense, or stimulus
- A61M2021/0027—Other devices or methods to cause a change in the state of consciousness; Devices for producing or ending sleep by mechanical, optical, or acoustical means, e.g. for hypnosis by the use of a particular sense, or stimulus by the hearing sense
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- This invention relates to a method of inducing sleep in a human being, and more particularly, to a method of inducing sleep by the generation of audio signals which are produced by the modulation of familiar re petitive noises with electroencephalographic (EEG) sleep patterns.
- EEG electroencephalographic
- the use of audio generators to induce sleep is well known in the prior art, as exemplified by US. Pat. Nos. 2,711,165 and 3,384,074.
- the audio signals used include pleasing and harmonious steady sounds or vibrations, fixed frequency signals which are cyclicly varied as to amplitude, and repetitive sounds such as the falling of rain on a roof and the sighing wind through the trees.
- the present invention comprises a method for inducing sleep wherein familiar, repetitive, pleasing sounds are modulated by predetermined EEG sleep signals to produce an audio signal which induces various stages of sleep.
- the audio signal thereby produced has been found to be a quick and efficient sleep inducing signal.
- the individual has the opportunity of selecting a signal most pleasing to himself for inducing sleep, and furthermore, he may determine the level of the sleep inducing signal in order to overcome ambient noise conditions.
- the subject may time the sleep inducing signal such that upon completion of a predetermined time period the signal will stop and, he will drift back to wakefulness.
- FIG. 1 is a typical human EEG pattern of awakeness with eyes open.
- FIG. 2 is an EEG pattern of awakeness with eyes closed.
- FIG. 3 is an EEG pattem of drowsiness.
- FIG. 4 is an EEG pattern of descending stage 1 sleep.
- FIG. 5 is an EEG pattern of stage 2 sleep.
- FIG. 6 is an EEG pattern of stage 2 sleep with sleep spindles.
- FIG. 7 is an EEG sleep pattern of stage 3 sleep.
- FIG. 8 is an EEG sleep pattern of stage 4 sleep.
- An electroencephalogram is a device for measuring the fluctuation of electrical potentials due to the electrical activity of the brain. It has been found, through the use of the EEG, that various patterns are generated during different states of consciousness of the human being. This is the subject of the book Electroencephalography: A Symposium In Its Various Aspects, by Hill and Park. There are two primary states of consciousness, waking and sleeping. Within'the waking state, there are various degreesof alertness ranging from frantic hyperalertness to drowsiness. Extreme alertness is associated with a low voltage, generally fast and irregular, of 10 to 20 microvolts amplitude and frequencies ranging from 10 to 40 cycles per second.
- Relaxed alertness is accompanied by an alpha rhythm, which is a regular sinusoidal rhythm with a frequency between 8 to 13 cps. As the state of consciousness changes from relaxed alertness to drowsiness, the alpha rhythm breaks up and tends to become less and less frequent.
- the first stage of sleep or state 1 has an EEG pattern, as shown in FIG. 4, which consists of an irregular mixture of theta waves which are-low in amplitude with a frequency of 4 to 8 cps, occasional alpha waves, and irregularly occurring alphoid waves which are similar to alpha waves but have a frequency of l to 2 cps lower than the alpha wave.
- stage 2 sleep An individual progresses from stage 1 sleep to stage 2 sleep, the EEG pattern of which is shown in FIG. 5.
- the stage 2 pattern is similar to stage 1 except that sleep spindles begin to appear.
- the spindles are short bursts of waves at a frequency of about 14 cps. They start at low amplitude and build up very rapidly to an amplitude of 30 or 40 microvolts and then quickly taper off.
- stage 3 sleep the EEG pattern of which is shown in FIG. 7.
- Stage 3 sleep is characterized by the appearance of delta waves which are waves of an amplitude of approximately microvolts or more and a frequency of l cps.
- Stage 4 sleep which follows stage 3 sleep is characterized by a preponderance of delta waves as opposed to the occasional delta waves of stage 3 sleep. In sleep stages 3 and 4, the spindles and irregular theta waves appearing in stage 2 sleep still appear.
- Stages 1 through 4 were initially conceived of as comprising a continuum from light to deep" sleep, but many other measures of the depth of sleep contradict this ordering. Stage 1 sleep occurring later in the night seems to have very distinct characteristics which make it a distinct kind of sleep, while stages 2, 3 and 4 do seem to comprise a depth continuum in a second kind of sleep.
- Stage 1 EEG sleep periods later in the night are accompanied by binocularly synchronous rapid eye movements (REMs), highly variable heart rate and breathing, and an inhibition of nerve transmission to the muscles.
- REMs binocularly synchronous rapid eye movements
- the reports may be classified into two rather distinct types.
- One type awakenings from stage 1 sleep or shortly (within, roughly -15 minutes) after stage 1 sleep has changed to nonstage 1 sleep possesses the characteristics traditionally associated with the experience of dreaming.
- Reports from nonstage-l sleep seem more like thinking and are generally called thinking by the subjects (these same subjects generally refer to their stage 1 experiences as dreams).
- the psychological differences reported so far are quantitative, rather than being completely dichotomous, but generally give the impression of distinct types of experiences.
- Stage 1 sleep is almost always accompanied by REMs, and the evidence is very convincing that these are closely associated with the content of the dream, if not actual scanning movements of the dream imagery. Such REMs have not been reported in non-stage 1 sleep, although there are some slow, rolling movements of the eyes.
- stage 1 dreaming and non-stage 1 sleep alternate in a regular, cyclic fashion, the sleepdream cycle.
- stage 1 dreaming and non-stage 1 sleep alternate in a regular, cyclic fashion, the sleepdream cycle.
- stage 1 dreaming occupies between and of the total sleep time of most young adults, spread over 3 to 6 stage 1 periods. While the exact percentage of dream time and the number of cycles vary from subject to subject, for a given subject the sleep-dream cycle is generally quite stable from night to night.
- the human body will respond to several sensory perceptions to induce sleep.
- the aural sense organ is the only one which continues to function not only during relaxation and drowsiness but also into the first three stages of sleep as well. Therefore, the induction of sleep by aural means is the most practical method of inducing controlled sleep.
- Wakefulness is produced by such warning signals as auto horns,
- the cultural environment of humans has tended to standardize the SCI to some degree for the various environments which groups of people live in. For instance, the SCI for people living in a large city would tend to be approximately the same as would the SCI for people living out in the country.
- an audio generator is placed near the bedside of an individual desiring to have sleep induced.
- the generator has a capability of providing at least seven basic sound patterns. These patterns are in accordance with the SCI of the individual.
- the seven basic sounds for a person living in an urban environment would be sounds of rain on a roof, gentle wind, waves upon a beach, slow breathing, machinery hum, the sound of a noncommunicative human voice and a steady 500 cycle hum.
- An individual, by listening to each of the seven sounds picks the sound which would be most pleasing to him in order to induce the sleep.
- the sound generated by the audio generator is the pleasing repetitive sound, as set forth above, amplitude modulated by the stage 3 and 4 EEG sleep pattern.
- the amplitude of the pleasing sound is confined to an envelope of the EEG sleep pattern.
- the familiar repetitive sound is modulated by a wave of theta sleep spindles and delta rhythms which are found in the EEG pattern during stage 3 and 4 sleep.
- EEG sleep pattern is not an EEG signal but a signal having the same wave shape as an EEG signal. This sound rapidly produces stage 1 sleep followed by stage 2, 3 and 4 sleep in most individuals. It has been found through experimentation that the results achieved by inducing sleep with a signal synthesized by modulating a pleasant signal with an EEG sleep pattern are several magnitudes higher than induction of sleep by use of a pleasant sound only.
- the apparatus for generating the familiar repetitive signal and the EEG sleep pattern signal may be any standard signal generators and modulators which are well known in the signal generating art.
- the sound produced by the audio generator be sufficient to mask all of the ambient noise in the environment of the individual. This is effected by the individual raising the volume of the audio generator until it is at a level above the ambient noise level of the surroundings.
- a method of inducing sleep in a human being comprising the steps of:
- a method of inducing sleep comprising:
- EEG sleep pattern signals are predetermined signals which have the same waveshape as the EEG patterns generated by sleeping individuals.
- step of selecting one of the plurality of audio signals comprises an individual listening to seven signals and deciding which signal is the most pleasing to him.
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Abstract
A method of inducing sleep in a human being wherein an audio signal is generated comprising a familiar pleasing repetitive sound modulated by an EEG sleep pattern. The volume of the audio signal is adjusted to overcome the ambient noise and a subject can select a familiar repetitive sound most pleasing to himself.
Description
United States Patent Monroe May 20, 1975 [54] METHOD OF INDUCING AND 3,384,074 5/1968 Rautiola et al 128/1 C MAINTAINING VARIOUS STAGES 01: 3,495,596 2/1970 Condict 128/422 SLEEP IN THE HUMAN BEING 3,576,185 4/1971 Schulz l28/l C [75] Inventor: Robert A. Monroe, Charlottesville, FOREIGN PATENTS OR APPLICATIONS Va 211.752 4/1968 u.s.s.R 128/1 6 l,l65,54l l0/l969 United Kingdom.... l28/l C [73] Assignee: Monroe Industries, Inc., 1,183,607 12/1964 Germany 128/1 C Charlottesville, Va. 9 Primary ExaminerWilliam E. Kamm [22] Ffled' Sept' 1970 Attorney, Agent, or Firm-Sughrue, Rothwell, Mion, [21] Appl. No.: 76,923 Zinn & Macpeak 1521 U.S. c1 128/1 c [57] ABSTRACT 51 Int. Cl A61b 19/00 A method of inducing Sleep in a human being wherein [58] Field of Search 128/1 c, 2.1 B, 422 an audio signal is generated comprising a familiar pleasing repetitive sound modulated by an EEG sleep 5 References Ci pattern. The volume of the audio signal is adjusted to UNITED STATES PATENTS overcome the ambient noise and a subject can select a familiar repetitive sound most pleasing to himself. 2,304,095 12/1942 Hull 128/1 C 3,032,029 5/1962 Cunningham 128/21 B 6 Claims, 8 Drawing Figures PATENTEB MAY 2 01975 FIG? HEB
M vyyy METHOD OF INDUCING AND MAINTAINING VARIOUS STAGES OF SLEEP IN THE HUMAN BEING BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 1. Field of the Invention This invention relates to a method of inducing sleep in a human being, and more particularly, to a method of inducing sleep by the generation of audio signals which are produced by the modulation of familiar re petitive noises with electroencephalographic (EEG) sleep patterns.
2. Description of the Prior Art The use of audio generators to induce sleep is well known in the prior art, as exemplified by US. Pat. Nos. 2,711,165 and 3,384,074. The audio signals used include pleasing and harmonious steady sounds or vibrations, fixed frequency signals which are cyclicly varied as to amplitude, and repetitive sounds such as the falling of rain on a roof and the sighing wind through the trees.
The prior art also discloses, in US. Pat, No. 3,304,095, a method for inducing sleep by the generation of an audible or tactual signal which is related to the physiological processes of heartbeat and respiration. In this method, the pitch and amplitude ofa pleasing audio signal are varied at a rate somewhat slower than either the rate of heartbeat or respiration, The heartbeat and respiration will tend to synchronize with the audio signal thereby lowering the heartbeat and respiration rate and inducing sleep.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION The present invention comprises a method for inducing sleep wherein familiar, repetitive, pleasing sounds are modulated by predetermined EEG sleep signals to produce an audio signal which induces various stages of sleep.
It has been found through the use of an EEG that various patterns of electrical activity are associated with different states of consciousness. There are two primary states, waking and sleeping. Within the waking state, there are various degrees of alertness ranging from frantichyperalertness through relaxed attentiveness to drowsiness. There are also several stages of sleep ranging from a light to deep. All of the various states of alertness and sleep have EEG patterns which are characteristic of the state. These patterns tend to be basically similar for all normal human beings. It is well known in the prior art, as set forth above, that familiar, repetitive, pleasing sounds tend to produce drowsiness and sleep in an individual. In the method of this invention, however, the pleasing sounds are combined with the EEG sleep patterns by modulating the former with the latter. The audio signal thereby produced has been found to be a quick and efficient sleep inducing signal. In the method of this invention, the individual has the opportunity of selecting a signal most pleasing to himself for inducing sleep, and furthermore, he may determine the level of the sleep inducing signal in order to overcome ambient noise conditions.
In addition, the subject may time the sleep inducing signal such that upon completion of a predetermined time period the signal will stop and, he will drift back to wakefulness.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS FIG. 1 is a typical human EEG pattern of awakeness with eyes open.
FIG. 2 is an EEG pattern of awakeness with eyes closed.
FIG. 3 is an EEG pattem of drowsiness.
FIG. 4 is an EEG pattern of descending stage 1 sleep.
FIG. 5 is an EEG pattern of stage 2 sleep.
FIG. 6 is an EEG pattern of stage 2 sleep with sleep spindles.
FIG. 7 is an EEG sleep pattern of stage 3 sleep.
FIG. 8 is an EEG sleep pattern of stage 4 sleep.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED METHOD An electroencephalogram (EEG) is a device for measuring the fluctuation of electrical potentials due to the electrical activity of the brain. It has been found, through the use of the EEG, that various patterns are generated during different states of consciousness of the human being. This is the subject of the book Electroencephalography: A Symposium In Its Various Aspects, by Hill and Park. There are two primary states of consciousness, waking and sleeping. Within'the waking state, there are various degreesof alertness ranging from frantic hyperalertness to drowsiness. Extreme alertness is associated with a low voltage, generally fast and irregular, of 10 to 20 microvolts amplitude and frequencies ranging from 10 to 40 cycles per second. Relaxed alertness is accompanied by an alpha rhythm, which is a regular sinusoidal rhythm with a frequency between 8 to 13 cps. As the state of consciousness changes from relaxed alertness to drowsiness, the alpha rhythm breaks up and tends to become less and less frequent. I 4
The first stage of sleep or state 1 has an EEG pattern, as shown in FIG. 4, which consists of an irregular mixture of theta waves which are-low in amplitude with a frequency of 4 to 8 cps, occasional alpha waves, and irregularly occurring alphoid waves which are similar to alpha waves but have a frequency of l to 2 cps lower than the alpha wave.
An individual progresses from stage 1 sleep to stage 2 sleep, the EEG pattern of which is shown in FIG. 5. The stage 2 pattern is similar to stage 1 except that sleep spindles begin to appear. The spindles are short bursts of waves at a frequency of about 14 cps. They start at low amplitude and build up very rapidly to an amplitude of 30 or 40 microvolts and then quickly taper off.
The individual then passes into stage 3 sleep, the EEG pattern of which is shown in FIG. 7. Stage 3 sleep is characterized by the appearance of delta waves which are waves of an amplitude of approximately microvolts or more and a frequency of l cps. Stage 4 sleep which follows stage 3 sleep is characterized by a preponderance of delta waves as opposed to the occasional delta waves of stage 3 sleep. In sleep stages 3 and 4, the spindles and irregular theta waves appearing in stage 2 sleep still appear.
Stages 1 through 4 were initially conceived of as comprising a continuum from light to deep" sleep, but many other measures of the depth of sleep contradict this ordering. Stage 1 sleep occurring later in the night seems to have very distinct characteristics which make it a distinct kind of sleep, while stages 2, 3 and 4 do seem to comprise a depth continuum in a second kind of sleep.
Stage 1 EEG sleep periods later in the night are accompanied by binocularly synchronous rapid eye movements (REMs), highly variable heart rate and breathing, and an inhibition of nerve transmission to the muscles.
If subjects are awakened from the two types of sleep and asked to report what they have been experiencing, the reports may be classified into two rather distinct types. One type awakenings from stage 1 sleep or shortly (within, roughly -15 minutes) after stage 1 sleep has changed to nonstage 1 sleep possesses the characteristics traditionally associated with the experience of dreaming. Reports from nonstage-l sleep seem more like thinking and are generally called thinking by the subjects (these same subjects generally refer to their stage 1 experiences as dreams). The psychological differences reported so far are quantitative, rather than being completely dichotomous, but generally give the impression of distinct types of experiences.
Stage 1 sleep is almost always accompanied by REMs, and the evidence is very convincing that these are closely associated with the content of the dream, if not actual scanning movements of the dream imagery. Such REMs have not been reported in non-stage 1 sleep, although there are some slow, rolling movements of the eyes.
For a normal subject, stage 1 dreaming and non-stage 1 sleep alternate in a regular, cyclic fashion, the sleepdream cycle. As a subject falls asleep, there is generally a brief period (a few seconds to a minute or two) of stage 1, without REMs, but subjects reports indicate that this is a period of hypnagogic imagery rather than typical dreaming. At approximately 90 minute intervals throughout the night there are periods of stage 1 dreaming, each dream period generally being longer than the preceding one. The first stage 1 period may last for 10 minutes; the fourth or fifth may last as long as 50 minutes. Altogether, stage 1 dreaming occupies between and of the total sleep time of most young adults, spread over 3 to 6 stage 1 periods. While the exact percentage of dream time and the number of cycles vary from subject to subject, for a given subject the sleep-dream cycle is generally quite stable from night to night.
It is well known that the human body will respond to several sensory perceptions to induce sleep. However, the aural sense organ is the only one which continues to function not only during relaxation and drowsiness but also into the first three stages of sleep as well. Therefore, the induction of sleep by aural means is the most practical method of inducing controlled sleep.
It has been found that familiar repetitive sounds tend to produce drowsiness and sleep. Conversely, the lack of these sounds tends to produce alertness and wakefulness. The sounds which effect a particular individual, because they must be familiar sounds, are dependent upon the environment of that individual. In other words, a city dweller may sleep with the steady rumble of traffic but he might find the sound of crickets to be so noisy that he cannot sleep. Investigation has shown that each individual is receptive to a specific sound pattern and these patterns are the product of his environmental conditioning. Some of the more common familiar repetitive sounds which tend to induce sleep are rain on a roof, machinery hum, gentle wind, ocean surf,
breathing, heartbeat, the human voice when noncommunicative or a steady 500 cycle hum. Wakefulness is produced by such warning signals as auto horns,
alarms, baby cries, etc. Each individual, therefore, has a pattern of response to various sounds. This pattern has been labeled his sound condition index (SCI).
The cultural environment of humans has tended to standardize the SCI to some degree for the various environments which groups of people live in. For instance, the SCI for people living in a large city would tend to be approximately the same as would the SCI for people living out in the country.
In the preferred method of this invention, an audio generator is placed near the bedside of an individual desiring to have sleep induced. The generator has a capability of providing at least seven basic sound patterns. These patterns are in accordance with the SCI of the individual. Typically, the seven basic sounds for a person living in an urban environment would be sounds of rain on a roof, gentle wind, waves upon a beach, slow breathing, machinery hum, the sound of a noncommunicative human voice and a steady 500 cycle hum. An individual, by listening to each of the seven sounds picks the sound which would be most pleasing to him in order to induce the sleep.
The sound generated by the audio generator is the pleasing repetitive sound, as set forth above, amplitude modulated by the stage 3 and 4 EEG sleep pattern. The amplitude of the pleasing sound is confined to an envelope of the EEG sleep pattern. In other words, the familiar repetitive sound is modulated by a wave of theta sleep spindles and delta rhythms which are found in the EEG pattern during stage 3 and 4 sleep. It should be noted that EEG sleep pattern is not an EEG signal but a signal having the same wave shape as an EEG signal. This sound rapidly produces stage 1 sleep followed by stage 2, 3 and 4 sleep in most individuals. It has been found through experimentation that the results achieved by inducing sleep with a signal synthesized by modulating a pleasant signal with an EEG sleep pattern are several magnitudes higher than induction of sleep by use of a pleasant sound only.
The apparatus for generating the familiar repetitive signal and the EEG sleep pattern signal, as well as the apparatus for modulating the former with the latter, may be any standard signal generators and modulators which are well known in the signal generating art.
One of the primary requirements of this method is that the sound produced by the audio generator be sufficient to mask all of the ambient noise in the environment of the individual. This is effected by the individual raising the volume of the audio generator until it is at a level above the ambient noise level of the surroundings.
It has been found that sleep can be maintained by maintaining the presence of the audio signal and that awakeness may be induced by stopping the audio generator. Therefore, an individual may determine the time which he sleeps by setting a timer which will automatically turn off the sound generator and thereby return him to a state of consciousness.
While the invention has been particularly shown and described with reference to the preferred embodiments thereof, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes in form and details may be made therein without departing from the spirit and the scope of the invention.
What is claimed is:
l. A method of inducing sleep in a human being, comprising the steps of:
a. generating an audio signal representing a familiar,
repetitive, pleasing sound;
b. generating a signal approximating a human EEG signal waveshape characteristic of a state of sleep;
0. amplitude modulating the audio signal with the EEG signal to produce an output signal; and
d. producing an audible sound signal from the output signal for listening by a human being 2. The method of claim 1 further comprising the step of setting the level of the audible sound signal above the ambient noise level.
3. A method of inducing sleep comprising:
a. generating an EEG sleep pattern signal;
b. generating one of a plurality of signals;
c. modulating the one of a plurality of signals with the EEG sleep pattern signal;
d. generating an audio signal from the modulated signal;
e. raising the audible level of the signal above the ambient noise level of the environment; and
f. setting a timing device to automatically turn off the audio signal after a predetermined time.
4. The method of claim 3 wherein the plurality of signals is predetermined based upon the environment to which an individual is accustomed.
5. The method of claim 4 wherein the EEG sleep pattern signals are predetermined signals which have the same waveshape as the EEG patterns generated by sleeping individuals.
6. The method of claim 3 wherein the step of selecting one of the plurality of audio signals comprises an individual listening to seven signals and deciding which signal is the most pleasing to him.
Claims (6)
1. A method of inducing sleep in a human being, comprising the steps of: a. generating an audio signal representing a familiar, repetitive, pleasing sound; b. generating a signal approximating a human EEG signal waveshape characteristic of a state of sleep; c. amplitude modulating the audio signal with the EEG signal to produce an output signal; and d. producing an audible sound signal from the output signal for listening by a human being.
2. The method of claim 1 further comprising the step of setting the level of the audible sound signal above the ambient noise level.
3. A method of inducing sleep comprising: a. generating an EEG sleep pattern signal; b. generating one of a plurality of signals; c. modulating the one of a plurality of signals with the EEG sleep pattern signal; d. generating an audio signal from the modulated signal; e. raising the audible level of the signal above the ambient noise level of the environment; and f. setting a timing device to automatically turn off the audio signal after a predetermined time.
4. The method of claim 3 wherein the plurality of signals is predetermined based upon the environment to which an individual is accustomed.
5. The method of claim 4 wherein the EEG sleep pattern signals are predetermined signals whicH have the same waveshape as the EEG patterns generated by sleeping individuals.
6. The method of claim 3 wherein the step of selecting one of the plurality of audio signals comprises an individual listening to seven signals and deciding which signal is the most pleasing to him.
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Cited By (41)
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US4222393A (en) * | 1978-07-28 | 1980-09-16 | American Tinnitus Association | Tinnitus masker |
US4227516A (en) * | 1978-12-13 | 1980-10-14 | Meland Bruce C | Apparatus for electrophysiological stimulation |
US4335710A (en) * | 1980-01-16 | 1982-06-22 | Omnitronics Research Corporation | Device for the induction of specific brain wave patterns |
US4573449A (en) * | 1983-03-08 | 1986-03-04 | Warnke Egon F | Method for stimulating the falling asleep and/or relaxing behavior of a person and an arrangement therefor |
US4883067A (en) * | 1987-05-15 | 1989-11-28 | Neurosonics, Inc. | Method and apparatus for translating the EEG into music to induce and control various psychological and physiological states and to control a musical instrument |
US5036858A (en) * | 1990-03-22 | 1991-08-06 | Carter John L | Method and apparatus for changing brain wave frequency |
US5151080A (en) * | 1988-08-30 | 1992-09-29 | Claus Bick | Method and apparatus for inducing and establishing a changed state of consciousness |
US5213562A (en) * | 1990-04-25 | 1993-05-25 | Interstate Industries Inc. | Method of inducing mental, emotional and physical states of consciousness, including specific mental activity, in human beings |
US5330414A (en) * | 1991-05-23 | 1994-07-19 | Pioneer Electronic Corporation | Brain wave inducing apparatus |
US5356368A (en) * | 1991-03-01 | 1994-10-18 | Interstate Industries Inc. | Method of and apparatus for inducing desired states of consciousness |
US5480374A (en) * | 1994-03-28 | 1996-01-02 | Van Dick; Robert C. | Method and apparatus for reducing physiological stress |
US5518497A (en) * | 1993-12-28 | 1996-05-21 | Cognitech Corporation | Trophotropic response system |
US5551879A (en) * | 1994-09-16 | 1996-09-03 | Dream Weaver J.V. | Dream state teaching machine |
USRE36348E (en) * | 1990-03-22 | 1999-10-19 | Neurotrain L.C. | Method and apparatus for changing brain wave frequency |
EP0963052A2 (en) * | 1998-06-05 | 1999-12-08 | Bayerische Motoren Werke Aktiengesellschaft | Device for influencing audio signals in a motor vehicle |
WO2003066157A2 (en) | 2002-02-04 | 2003-08-14 | Great Lakes Biosciences, Llc | Treatment of neurological disorders using electrical stimulation |
WO2004075714A2 (en) * | 2003-02-28 | 2004-09-10 | Cornel Lustig | Device for manipulating the state of alertness |
US20050084075A1 (en) * | 2003-10-15 | 2005-04-21 | Motorola, Inc. | Method and apparatus for selecting an alert mode based on user biometrics |
WO2005055802A2 (en) | 2003-11-21 | 2005-06-23 | First Principles, Inc. | Sleep guidance system and related methods |
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