Just heard of this device to help calm the racing thoughts and aid meditation.
I've followed Muse since it was featured on Indiegogo. The device is interesting, and it's designed for the iPhone and Android. In addition, the creators are using it as part of a clinical trial with more planned. At $299, it's an expensive tool, but perhaps it will improve someone's ability to mediate and relax. These are important activities when tinnitus stresses us out; and, perhaps, longer term the device will help facilitate habituation. That said, neurofeedback devices for home use typically do not compare favorably with professional models. With current clinical trials planned at Harvard and the VA, however, Muse's accuracy is probably better than your average device.
If anyone tries the product, please let us know or write a review!
Here are some excerpts from an August, 2014,
Newsweek article about Muse:
Muse is a very designed product, more Apple store than CVS, a sleek plastic band embedded with seven electroencephalography (EEG) sensors that monitor your brain activity. The device can send real-time information to any compatible device over Bluetooth. For now, Muse is primarily marketed alongside InteraXon's iPhone and the Android app Calm, which is meant to help you learn to, essentially, meditate stress out of your daily life. The app teaches you how to bring your brain state from active to resting.
...
Garten says she and her team have developed Muse in partnership with clinicians, ranging from therapists working in private practices to physicians working with cancer patients to help reduce the stress associated with treatment. But the device hasn't been fully vetted by the medical community; no peer-reviewed studies have been published. Linden says a consumer EEG device might be a little ways off, given the current understanding of neurofeedback.
However, according to Gartner, clinical trials using Muse have begun at Harvard, and there are plans for many more at research universities and institutes. The Department of Veterans Affairs, for example, plans to test the product's efficacy in managing the symptoms of post-traumatic stress syndrome.
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