Summary
Biohacker Tools joins The Human Upgrade to discuss the machine that flicks on your brain in 30 seconds | biohacker tools : 1373. Key topics include practical biohacking tools and technologies for health optimization; performance optimization strategies backed by science; practical takeaways for implementing discussed protocols.
Key Points
- Practical biohacking tools and technologies for health optimization
- Performance optimization strategies backed by science
- Practical takeaways for implementing discussed protocols
- Key research findings and their real-world applications
- Expert insights on optimizing health outcomes
Key Moments
Combining Roxiva light and vibroacoustic therapy for brain state shifts
Rafael Gianfrancesco describes his protocol for rapidly shifting brain states: lying someone under a Roxiva flickering light device on a powerful vibroacoustic surface to achieve deep coherent states within an hour, without psychedelics.
"If you had one hour to shift someone's brain state as much as you could, without psychedelics, what would you do?"
How vibroacoustic therapy uses sound to create physical movement
Rafael explains that vibroacoustic therapy uses sound frequencies to create physical vibration patterns in the body, similar to cymatics where water placed on a speaker creates geometric patterns, harnessing the principle that everything has a vibration.
"The words say it all really, it's, it uses sound to create movement. And so I don't know if you have ever watched the videos of when they put water on a speaker, and vibrated and the water makes all these gorgeous patterns and simatics."
Vibroacoustic devices deployed with US Air Force pilots
Rafael reveals that vibroacoustic and light-based entrainment technologies are being studied and deployed with US Air Force pilots operating high-value aircraft, pointing to serious institutional interest in these modalities for human performance.
"They're studying these technologies, vibroacoustics, light-based entrainment. With the pilots, we've got several of these devices placed with the U.S. Air Force. And you have to imagine these pilots that are piloting these $150 million planes."