Thync is a consumer product. And that's exactly how we're reviewing it – much like we would a new iPhone or laptop. We share our experience and make our recommendations, but we aren't writing any research papers or conducting any double-blind studies on it (though the company does link to some of those on its website).
After using Thync every day for the last week and a half, I'm convinced that it's one of the most exciting new tech products of 2015. Like taking a hit of Mary Jane, it can push me from an anxious, over-thinking mood to one where I'm cool, collected and laid-back like a THC-infused Rastafarian. And if I'm feeling sluggish or unmotivated, Thync can also peel that layer away, like the sun burning a morning fog off of my consciousness.
I heard about the brain-mod crowd a couple years ago at the New York Maker's Faire. A team from DARPA gave a talk on an electro-stimulation cap they said was meant to fight Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) in veterans. This seems to follow. Has anyone from Soylent experimented with trans-cranial electro-stimulation?
(Score: 2, Insightful) by patella.whack on Thursday July 30 2015, @04:53AM
'singing' right?
It makes me wonder if these sorts of stimulations might enhance creative output in a person over the long term. If treatments can decrease depression and increase creativity at the same time, it's an interesting contradiction to the CW that depression or mental instability is conducive to creativity. In the future, if you're of the generation that wasn't genetically engineered by your parents to have exceptional characteristics, you can self-select desirable traits this way.
(Score: 2) by hemocyanin on Thursday July 30 2015, @05:52AM
That's the stereotype, but there's another side where instead of being creative, a person gets so ridiculously hopeless they don't do anything.