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EEG-Guided Binaural Beat Audio to Reduce Performance-Related Stress and Improve Cognition
Sponsor: Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center
Summary
Performance-related stress can impair sustained attention, inhibitory control, and memory. This randomized, double-blinded, sham-controlled parallel-arm trial evaluates whether a 30-minute EEG-guided binaural beat audio intervention reduces subjective stress/performance anxiety and improves cognition, and whether it changes task-related brain reactivity measured by fMRI. The intervention uses real-time single-electrode EEG recorded over the left prefrontal cortex to dynamically adjust binaural beat frequencies to guide the brain toward a target state; the sham condition uses non-binaural music delivered through identical headphones. Adult music majors preparing for an upcoming concert will complete pre- and post-intervention fMRI sessions during cognitive/music tasks (Stop Signal Reaction Task, Music Reading Task, Music Memory Retrieval Task) and complete visual analog scales (VAS) assessing performance anxiety, stress, and related subjective states. The primary outcomes include fMRI task-related activity in stress-regulation regions (dlPFC, amygdala, hippocampus), behavioral inhibition indices from the stop-signal task, music memory retrieval accuracy, and VAS-reported stress/performance anxiety.
Official title: Effects of EEG-guided Binaural Beat Audio Intervention on Brain Reactivity Associated With Performance-related Stress and Cognition Among Professional Musicians: A Randomized, Double-blinded, Sham-controlled Functional Neuroimaging Trial
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
32
Start Date
2026-03-01
Completion Date
2026-08-30
Last Updated
2026-02-25
Healthy Volunteers
Yes
Interventions
EEG-guided binaural beat audio
30-minute session delivered via headphones; proprietary algorithm uses real-time single-electrode EEG from the left prefrontal cortex to dynamically adjust binaural beat frequencies.
Non-binaural audio intervention
30-minute session of music without frequency differences between ears (non-binaural), delivered via identical headphones; blinding maintained.
Locations (1)
Texas Tech University
Lubbock, Texas, United States