I was curious since i have a high end sound card that plays from 1-196hz and a 5-115hz pair of headphones if i am getting the full spectrum when i play a i-doser file. Does the program take complete advantage of your sound card?
gooble wrote:the carriers in any given dose will most likely go no lower than 150 Hz and no higher than 400 or 500 Hz.
thats impossible a pair of your average headphones only goes to 22-26khz and your ear cant even hear sounds at those frequency's. some of the doses say they go down to about 8khz
I suggest you stop talking because you clearly have no idea what you're talking about. Average headphones go 20 Hz to 20 KHz, which is also the human hearing range. By what your saying, the dozens of binaurals ive made over the past 2 years used carrier frequencies that i couldn't hear? And I don't know of a single dose going UP to 8 KHz for a carrier, that's an extremely obnoxious high-pitched tone. I'll make a quick 5 second clip of a 8000 Hz (8 KHz) tone and then a 250 Hz tone and post a link here. These aren't binaurals, just the pure tones (as in, playing 8 KHz in both sides).
not to get off the subject... but I had a bass testing tone going through my subs I had bought.. I have no idea what the tone was it was super low.
then it got up to a tone that was a really high bass tone.
but I could like feel something with that tone.
maybe it had something like an iso tone?
I was saying that even if it is unaudible, it still has a great deal of impact on the brain. If you dont want to read it then read the last sentence of the abstract and read on if that interests you. if your in the brainwave industry maybe you should get on this stuff unlike everyone else is doing and make some more potent binaural beats.