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There is now an easier way to create isochronic tones. A plug-in was developed
by Steve Daulton which you can download from this forum.post.
Installing the IsoMod plug-in
Once you have downloaded the plugin to your hard drive, copy it to your
plug-ins folder of the audacity program folder e.g C:\Program
Files\Audacity\Plug-Ins. Start up
audacity and it will be
available at the effects menu when you have generated a tone.
Creating an 10hz Alpha Wave Isochronic Tone with a 90hz Carier Frequency
1. Generate a tone by clicking 'Generate' from the menu and selecting 'Tone,,,',
2. Select 'Sine' for the Waveform, 90 for the 'Frequency/Hz', 0.6 for the 'Amplitude', and 600
for a 10 minute duration then click 'Generate Tone'
'Initial Modulation Frequency' and 'Final Modulation Frequency' is the isochronic beat you
want to
target. They must be the same unless you are creating a ramp.
"Initial Modulation Depth' and 'Final Modulation Depth' must be set to 100 to get a pure
isochronic
beat.
You can play around with 'Fade Time'. The lower the value the truer its isochronic waveform
is. As
the value gets higher, the silence portion gets smaller. I find the value of 15 to be acceptable.
IsoMod supports ramping but you can only create it one time either going from a high frequency
to a lower frequency or from a lower brainwave frequency to a higher brainwave frequency. If
you're designing an
isochronic tone which ramp more than one time, you need to create several tones then just
'stitch' them together.
1. 10hz = 6min
. 10hz to 4z ramp = 2min
. 4hz = 6min.
4hz to 10hz ramp= 2min
That's it! Have fun and may you reap the benefits that
isochronic tones can give you.