Benefits

Benefits

Sound Therapy is an outstanding new technology designed for accessibility, affordability and ease of use. Its potential health benefits are extensive and may include the following effects:

  • New vitality and sense of well being
  • Relief of tiredness and stress
  • Deep relaxation and relief of anxiety
  • Heightened creativity and mental capacity
  • Increased energy, focus and performance
  • Deep, beneficial sleep and an end to insomnia
  • Improved hearing for those with industrial deafness or hearing loss due to aging
  • Relief of tinnitus (ringing in the ears)
  • Better balance and recovery from dizziness or vertigo
  • Improved concentration and learning ability
  • Improved behaviour and communication in children
  • Increased voice quality and vocal range
  • Better communication, relationships and greater family harmony
Brain Integration PDF Print E-mail

Right and left brain hemispheres

The left brain hemisphere is the language-processing centre. The right brain is used for spatial judgment, movement, drawing, music, mathematics and technical abilities.

Sound therapy works on both sides to develop areas where we might be weak and improve communication between the hemispheres. For this reason Sound Therapy listeners often find themselves developing new abilities and overcoming blocks.

Why are high frequencies important for the Brain?

Through his study of embryology, Tomatis realised that the first sounds we hear are high frequency sounds because the area of the cochlea which detects high frequencies is the first to develop.

Through his experiments Tomatis showed that high frequency sounds serve as a vital and necessary stimulant for cortical activity. The brain needs high frequencies in order to be fully functional. The electrical charge of the brain, the energy on which it runs, needs to be regularly replenished and Tomatis discovered a way to do this by using specially processed sounds.
 

The cerebellum

The cerebellum plays a significant role in sensory co-ordination, both visual and auditory, and has been dubbed the autopilot of the brain. It is an area of the brain about the size of your fist, which sits behind the brainstem at the base of your skull. Sound Therapy researchers now believe that any learning difficulty associated with auditory processing problems is linked to the cerebellum.

Researchers are only now beginning to unravel the deeply important role of the cerebellum, for while it directs no specific body functions, it operates as monitor and coordinator of the brain's other centres and as mediator between them and the body.

It has been known for some time that the cerebellum was responsible for the management of the body's equilibrium and muscular activity. However, it has more recently come to light that the cerebellum is equally involved in the co-ordination of the sensations of touch, hearing and sight.

Sound Therapy brings about improved function and integration of cerebellar pathways and this means that many areas of our sensory and motor function are improved.

 

To learn more about how Sound Therapy improves neural functioning, request one of our Free Reports.

 

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