| Literature DB >> 35162009 |
Abstract
The increased demand for well-being has fueled interest in sleep. Research in technology for monitoring sleep ranges from sleep efficiency and sleep stage analysis to sleep disorder detection, centering on wearable devices such as fitness bands, and some techniques have been commercialized and are available to consumers. Recently, as interest in digital therapeutics has increased, the field of sleep engineering demands a technology that helps people obtain quality sleep that goes beyond the level of monitoring. In particular, interest in sleep aids for people with or without insomnia but who cannot fall asleep easily at night is increasing. In this review, we discuss experiments that have tested the sleep-inducing effects of various auditory stimuli currently used for sleep-inducing purposes. The auditory stimulations were divided into (1) colored noises such as white noise and pink noise, (2) autonomous sensory meridian response sounds such as natural sounds such as rain and firewood burning, sounds of whispers, or rubbing various objects with a brush, and (3) classical music or a preferred type of music. For now, the current clinical method of receiving drugs or cognitive behavioral therapy to induce sleep is expected to dominate. However, it is anticipated that devices or applications with proven ability to induce sleep clinically will begin to appear outside the hospital environment in everyday life.Entities:
Keywords: auditory stimulation sleep induction; digital therapeutics; sleep; sleep aid
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35162009 PMCID: PMC8838436 DOI: 10.3390/s22031264
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Representative auditory stimulation-based sleep induction devices and apps on the market.
| Product Category | Product Name | Sound Material | Additional Functions | Photo |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sound machine | Sound + Sleep Mini | 12 audio programs, each with multiple options for environment and complexity, for a total of 48 unique audio settings (rainfall, flowing water, ocean, city, white/pink/brown noise, etc.) | Built-in microphone to listen to your environment and dynamically adjust the volume based on ambient noise levels |
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| Sound machine | Lectrofan | 12 unique digital sounds to mask noises and a choice from 10 electric fan sounds and 10 variations of pure white noise (including pink and brown noise variations) | Soft-glow reading light without eye-straining blue hues |
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| Sound machine | Hatch Restore | Library of soothing sounds (white noise, ocean, rain, water, wind, birds, dryer, heartbeat, etc) | Sunrise alarm, smart light, meditation app, and an alarm clock |
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| Sound machine | WAVE™ | 6 soothing sounds (white noise, fan, ocean, rain, stream, and summer night) | USB port with 2A output to charge USB-powered device |
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| Sound machine | Letsfit T126L | 14 natural sounds (white noise, ocean wave, crickets, fan noise, clothes dryer, birds, thunderstorm, water stream, nursery rhyme) | Warm night-light |
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| Wearable | Sleepphones | 17 audio tracks featuring binaural beat technology (colored noise, waterfall, stream, waves, etc.) | For listening to music and TV in bed at night while your partner sleeps |
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| App | Sleepmaker Rain1 | 21 rain sounds (rainfall in forests, rain against window with wind, rain onto porch roof, torrential downpour, etc.) | Programmable Sleep Timer |
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| App | Sleepa | Sleepa Sound Library (rain, forest, creek, wind, fire, city sound, colored noise, binaural beats that replicate brainwaves) | Mix, match, and save over 120 M combinations of soundsProgrammable Sleep Timer |
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Figure 1Simulated power spectral density as a function of frequency for different colored noise (red, blue, pink, violet, and white). The power spectral density is normalized arbitrarily so that the spectral values are approximately 1 Hz.
Figure 2Simulated colored noise signals and spectrograms: (a) white noise, (b) red noise, (c) pink noise, (d) blue noise, and (e) violet noise.
A study on sleep induction using pure colored noise as an auditory stimulus.
| First Author, Year, Country | Study Design | Participants | N, Mean Age ± SD | Noise | Intervention Duration | Control Group | Sleep Measure(s) | Sleep Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Spencer (1990) England | Randomized controlled trial | Healthy neonates | 40, (2–7 days old) | White noise (speaker) | Four and a half minutes | Not exposed to white noise | Observed by a single investigator | 80% of babies fell asleep when they were exposed to the white noise compared with 25% who fell asleep in the control group. |
| Forquer&Johnson | Crossover | Healthy college students | 4, 19 | White noise (speaker) | Continuously from bedtime to waking for 7 nights | None | Sleep diary, PSQI, sleep hygiene test | Decrease in both sleep latency and night wakings during treatment |
| Rosalez (2020) | Crossover | ADHD Children | 3 (9–11) | White noise | Continuous at night | Not exposed to white noise | Sleep diary | Decreased bedtime sleep latency and spontaneous night wakings at home |
| Ebben (2021) | Crossover | Adults with insomnia | 10, 58 (39–74) | White noise | 2nd week of 3 weeks, | None | Daily sleep diary and actigraphy | Reduced WASO and sleep latency, reduced the number of awakenings during the night, improved sleep efficiency |
| Cho (2021) | Randomized controlled trial | Adult inpatient | 61 | White noise | 1 h per night for 3 days | Wear earplugs | VSH, actigraphy | Positive effects on subjective sleep quality, improved sleep time and sleep efficiency |
| Messineo | Crossover | Healthy adults | 18 (20–65) | Broadband | 1 of 2 weeks | None | PSG, PSQI, VAS, SSS | Reduced sleep onset latency, improved subjective sleep quality |
| Kawada (1993) | Crossover | Healthy young subjects | 4, 19.8 (19–21) | Pink noise | 1 of 2 days | None | PSG | Reduced sleep latency |
| Garcia-Molina | Crossover | Healthy subjects | 7, 33.6 ± 8.7 | Pink noise | 4 of 5 sleep sessions | None | PSG | Reduced slap latency |
ASMR for sleep inducement with the highest number of views uploaded in 2021 (accessed on: 7 February 2022).
| Num | Sound | URL | Total Views |
|---|---|---|---|
| (a) | The sound of making glossy slime with a piping bag |
| 3,113,664 |
| (b) | A voice whispering softly during a hair shop role play |
| 1,694,665 |
| (c) | The sound of an oil massage and the whispering sound overlapped |
| 681,237 |
| (d) | The sound of raindrops falling from the eaves and raindrops pouring |
| 746,214 |
| (e) | Steel wool sponges, the sound of rubbing various brushes, dolls, paper packaging materials, toys, etc. |
| 500,158 |
Figure 3Sound waves and spectrograms for a 50-s sound source randomly extracted from videos uploaded to YouTube for sleep induction: (a) the sound of making glossy slime with a piping bag, (b) a voice whispering softly in a hair shop role play, (c) the sound of an oil massage and the whispering sound overlapped, (d) the sound of raindrops falling from the eaves and raindrops pouring, (e) steel wool sponges, the sound of rubbing various brushes, dolls, paper packaging materials, toys, etc., into the microphone.
Research studies on sleep induction using ASMR as auditory stimulation.
| First Author, Year, Country | Study Design | Participant | N, Mean Age ± SD | Noise | Intervention Duration | Control Group | Sleep Measure(s) | Sleep Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Williamson | Randomized controlled trial | First-time CABG patients | 60 | Soothing nature sounds such as rain, waves, or waterfalls | Three consecutive nights posttransfer from the ICU | Not exposed to ocean sound | Richards–Campbell Sleep Questionnaire, a visual analog scale | Falling asleep faster and maintaining sleep |
| Hardian | Randomized controlled trial | Students at medical college | 30, 18.4 ± 0.72, 17~20 | Haircut, cooking, whispering, rubbing, delicate hand movements | 14 days, 20 min from 9:00 pm | Not exposed to ASMR | PSQI | Improved subjective sleep quality |
| Umbas | Crossover | High school students | 12 (16–18) | Rain sound | Whole night for 30 days | None | PSQI | Reducing sleep onset latency |
A study on sleep induction using music as an auditory stimulus.
| First Author, Year, Country | Study Design | Participant | N, Mean Age ± SD | Noise | Intervention Duration | Control Group | Sleep Measure(s) | Sleep Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Iwaki | Crossover | Healthy university students | 20 (20–28) | Preferred familiar music | 1 week before nap | No music played | PSG, KSS | Reduced sleep latency in natural sleep |
| Johnson | Crossover | Older subjects with insomnia | 52 (80.5, 71–87) | Participant selected music | turn the music on as soon as they got into bed for 10 nights | No music played | Stanford Sleepiness Scale | Significant increase in level of sleepiness at bedtime |
| Lai | Randomized controlled trial | Subjects with difficulty in sleeping | 60 (60~83) | five types of Western and one of Chinese music | 45 min at bedtime for 3 weeks | No music played | PSQI, ESC | Better sleep quality, better perceived sleep quality, longer sleep duration, greater sleep efficiency, shorter sleep latency, less sleep disturbance, and less daytime dysfunction |
| Bloch | Crossover | Subjects with schizophrenia | 24, 45.67 ± 9.6 (18~70) | Relaxation music composed specifically for the study | 40 min at bedtime, 7 of 14 days | No intervention | Actigraphy, | Reduced sleep latency, improved sleep efficiency, reduction in the number of reported complaints of subjective insomnia |
| Shum | Randomized controlled trial | Community-dwelling older adults | 60, 55 years or above | Soft, instrumental slow sedative | 40 min per night for 6 weeks | Not listen to sedative music, but they were not restricted from listening to radio or TV | PSQI | Improving sleep quality |
| Wang | Randomized controlled trial | Older with poor sleep quality | 64, 69.38 ± 5.46 | Preferred music | 30–45 min per night for 3 months | No intervention | PSQI, QoS | Improving sleep latency, sleep efficiency, and daytime dysfunction |
| Dubey | Crossover | Healthy male volunteer with a history of delayed sleep latency | 15 (18~40) | 432 Hz music | 15 to 20 min before nap | No intervention | PSG | Decrease in the mean sleep latency, |
| Jespersen | Randomized controlled trial | Subjects with insomnia | 57 (18 and 65) | Classical, jazz, new age, and ambient music | Minimum 30-min at bedtime for 3 weeks | No intervention | PSG, PSQI, pQoL | Positive impact on sleep perception and quality of life, reduced sleep onset latency |