Alpha wave music for calm concentration, deep work, and anxiety relief
Functional music designed to promote calm focus, particularly for people with busy minds, ADHD or autism.
Binaural beats are an auditory phenomenon created when two slightly different frequencies are played separately into each ear. Your brain perceives a third “beat” frequency equal to the difference between the two tones.
This perceived beat can gently encourage your brain’s electrical activity to synchronize with specific frequency ranges associated with different mental states.
When you listen with headphones, a 200Hz tone in your left ear and a 211Hz tone in your right ear creates a perceived 11Hz beat. This 11Hz frequency falls within the alpha brainwave range (7-13Hz), associated with relaxed alertness and focused attention.
The effect is processed in the superior olivary complex of your brainstem, not in your ears.
AarDHD tracks are designed to support:
Understanding the frequencies and their effects
Binaural beats operate on the principle of brainwave entrainment. Research suggests that exposing the brain to specific frequencies may encourage it to synchronize its electrical activity with those frequencies, potentially influencing cognitive states.
| Frequency Range | Brainwave Type | Associated State |
|---|---|---|
| 0.5-4 Hz | Delta | Deep sleep, restoration |
| 4-7 Hz | Theta | Deep relaxation, meditation, light sleep onset |
| 7-13 Hz | Alpha | Relaxed alertness, reduced anxiety, focused attention |
| 12-15 Hz | SMR (Sensorimotor Rhythm) | Calm, attentive focus without anxiety |
The study of binaural beats for cognitive enhancement remains an active area of research. While some studies show promising results for attention and relaxation, the evidence base is still developing. Effects vary between individuals and depend on factors including baseline brain activity, attention to the stimulus, and listening environment.
The phenomenon was first described by Heinrich Wilhelm Dove in 1839 and further investigated by Gerald Oster in 1973, who established that binaural beats are processed in the superior olivary complex of the brainstem rather than in the ears themselves.
Research suggests that people with ADHD often show reduced beta and SMR brainwave activity during attention tasks. The 11-13Hz range used in AarDHD tracks targets this specific frequency band.
The music provides gentle auditory structure without being intrusive, helping to occupy the “wandering” part of the mind while you work.
The tracks maintain consistent, predictable patterns without sudden changes or overstimulation. The minimal, spacious composition avoids sensory overload while providing a calming acoustic environment.
Texture and timbre remain stable throughout, creating a reliable sonic space for concentration.
The evidence is mixed. Some studies show promising results for attention and relaxation in people with ADHD, particularly in the 11-15Hz range (alpha and SMR frequencies). Research suggests people with ADHD often show reduced activity in these frequency bands during attention tasks.
However, effects vary significantly between individuals. Binaural beats are a tool that may support focus and calm, not a medical treatment or guaranteed solution. Many listeners report subjective benefits for concentration and stress reduction.
The binaural beat effect requires each ear to receive a slightly different frequency. When you wear headphones, your left ear might hear 200Hz while your right ear hears 211Hz. Your brain processes this difference as an 11Hz beat.
If you listen through speakers, both frequencies mix in the air before reaching your ears, which eliminates the binaural effect. However, the music is still designed to be calming and useful for focus even without headphones.
For focus and concentration, 30-60 minutes is typical. The brain needs time to synchronize with the frequency — most people report effects beginning after 10-15 minutes of continuous listening.
There’s no maximum duration, but it’s sensible to take breaks during long work sessions. Listen as long as you find it helpful.
Different frequencies correspond to different brainwave states. 11Hz falls in the alpha range (7-13Hz), associated with relaxed alertness — calm but awake and focused.
Lower frequencies like 4-7Hz (theta) promote deep relaxation and meditation. Higher frequencies like 12-15Hz (SMR) support calm, attentive focus without anxiety. Very low frequencies (0.5-4Hz delta) are for deep sleep.
Yes, that’s precisely what these tracks are designed for. The alpha frequency range (including 11Hz) is specifically chosen to support sustained attention during cognitive tasks.
The music is intentionally spacious and unobtrusive — it creates psychological space rather than demanding your attention.
Binaural beats are generally safe for most people. The main consideration is volume — always listen at comfortable levels to protect your hearing.
A small number of people report mild headaches or dizziness, particularly when first using binaural beats. People with epilepsy or seizure disorders should consult a healthcare professional before using any form of rhythmic audio stimulation.
Yes. While AarDHD tracks are designed with neurodivergent listeners in mind, anyone experiencing stress, anxiety, or difficulty concentrating may find them useful.
The alpha frequency range is beneficial for general stress reduction and focus regardless of neurotype.
Regular ambient music provides a pleasant auditory environment. Binaural beats add a functional element — specific frequencies designed to encourage particular brainwave states through auditory entrainment.
AarDHD tracks combine both: they’re musically coherent compositions that also incorporate precise binaural frequencies.
Focus music for deep work, study, and calm concentration. Best experienced with headphones.
A nine minute alpha wave session at 11Hz, designed for sustained focus and deep work. Best experienced with headphones.
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An work-in-progress track with guitar melodies, violin backing and isochronic tones.
Coming Soon