Today in the lesson we discussed "brown noise".
Brown noise is one of the many colours of noise, which also include white noise, pink noise and blue noise. Brown noise doesn't get its moniker from the colour, it is named after botanist Robert Brown, who discovered Brownian motion in the 1800s.
Brown noise is also known as Brownian noise because its change in sound signal from one moment to the next is random.
Brown noise has more energy at lower frequencies and resembles the sound of a strong waterfall.
My feelings of the noise.
I can be rather gullible and open to really anything, although there is always in the back of my mind that it could be the Placebo effect, I knew what I was going to hear so I could block it out you need to be open to truly gain from the noise and I understand its powers.
Intense sound.
Links to the Coercion techniques- torture without touching the body, getting into someone's mind. It is the practice of forcing a person to act in an involuntary manner by using threats and intimidation including extortion, torture and blackmail.
Japanese water torture encompasses a variety of techniques using water to inflict physical or psychological harm on a victim as a form of torture.
Numbness
Feeling of uncomfort.
Tingling sensation running thought the brain and face.
When eyes are open you immediately reject your instincts.
Fuzzy feeling.
The sound be becomes your world, an allusive feeling.
Tension.
I feel like time had stopped
Whispering beneath the surface of the sound.
We performed some experiments for year twelves and volunteers from Central drama school. we turned the lights off, shut the curtains and made them lie in semi-supine.
Thoughts of year 12
Scared.
Affected the heart.
Paranoid.
Uncomfortable.
Face feels numb.
Thoughts of the visitors
Feel attacked
Fear
Every time the sound changed even more fear.
The repetition drives the fear.
No escape.
No logical thoughts forming.
The sound overpowers your mind.
Lack of function when sound stopped.
Physically increased heartbeat.