This crazy new wearable uses 'neurostimulation' to prime your brain and body for exercise

This crazy new wearable uses 'neurostimulation' to 

prime your brain and body for exercise

Halo Sport, neuroscience, heaphones


What if a one-hour workout could get you 1.5 hours of gains?
It sounds outrageous, but Daniel Chao and Brett Wingeier –founders of Halo Neuroscience


— think 

they can make it happen with a clever new approach. Rather than focusing on your 

muscles, they’ve developed a headset that boosts your workout by stimulating your brain. 

The Halo Sport headphones, as they’re called, are designed to prime your brain for 

exercise.

The process is called “neuropriming,” and it involves using gentle electrical pulses to 

encourage the brain to form new pathways — thereby making training more effective. 

Sending targeted signals to the brain boosts motor unit recruitment, meaning it helps the 

brain activate more muscle fibers. Increased muscle fiber activation shows in increased 

muscle performance.

“When a neuropriming session is paired with athletic training, the brain is primed to more 

quickly generate and strengthen neural pathways.” Dr. Chao, CEO of Halo Neuroscience 

explained to Digital Trends. “We refer to this phenomenon as hyperplasticity.”  The brain 

retains information more rapidly in a hyperplastic state, which means increased strength and 

skill retention with training.


The brain stimulation tech is all concealed in a typical headphone body, ad while you can use them to listen to music, they phones are primarily designed for neurostimulation. “There are three foam primers that fit onto the device that each target specific parts of the motor cortex,” Chao says. “We program the headset to send a constant small current to one primer (i.e. electrode) to another. This flow of current increases the excitability and synchrony of neurons in the motor cortex region situated beneath the primers. This basic mechanism is what allows Halo Sport to modulate motor performance.”
It basically encourages your brain to accelerate muscle memory. Muscles respond faster to training, which means that hour in the gym using Halo Sport can give more gains than an hour without. The app lets users target a particular area of the body for specific gains. Athletes activate Halo Sport’s preprogrammed energy signals via the app before a workout, then just exercise as normal. Most won’t feel any different, at first.
“The range of current used is generally 2.0 mA or less. For comparison, one tiny LED light uses more current than this,” Dr. Chao said. “The feeling is different for each person that wears the device — most describe it as a light tingling sensation, others call it tickly or warm. Some feel no sensation at all. The user has complete control to increase or decrease the strength from their app.”

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