HEALTH Rustle, Tingle, Relax: The Compelling World of A.S.M.R.

FarmerJohn

Has No Life - Lives on TB
[Videos at link]

By STEPHANIE FAIRYINGTON JULY 28, 2014
A few months ago, I was on a Manhattan-bound D train heading to work when a man with a chunky, noisy newspaper got on and sat next to me. As I watched him softly turn the pages of his paper, a chill spread like carbonated bubbles through the back of my head, instantly relaxing me and bringing me to the verge of sweet slumber.

It wasn’t the first time I’d felt this sensation at the sound of rustling paper — I’ve experienced it as far back as I can remember. But it suddenly occurred to me that, as a lifelong insomniac, I might be able to put it to use by reproducing the experience digitally whenever sleep refused to come.

Under the sheets of my bed that night, I plugged in some earphones, opened the YouTube app on my phone and searched for “Sound of pages.” What I discovered stunned me.

There were nearly 2.6 million videos depicting a phenomenon called autonomous sensory meridian response, or A.S.M.R., designed to evoke a tingling sensation that travels over the scalp or other parts of the body in response to auditory, olfactory or visual forms of stimulation.

The sound of rustling pages, it turns out, is just one of many A.S.M.R. triggers. The most popular stimuli include whispering; tapping or scratching; performing repetitive, mundane tasks like folding towels or sorting baseball cards; and role-playing, where the videographer, usually a breathy woman, softly talks into the camera and pretends to give a haircut, for example, or an eye examination. The videos span 30 minutes on average, but some last more than an hour.

For those not wired for A.S.M.R. — and even for those who, like me, apparently are — the videos and the cast of characters who produce them — sometimes called “ASMRtists” or “tingle-smiths” — can seem weird, creepy or just plain boring. (Try pitching the pleasures of watching a nerdy German guy slowly and silently assemble a computer for 30 minutes.)

Two of the most well-known ASMRtists, Maria of GentleWhispering (more than 250,700 subscribers) and Heather Feather (more than 146,500 subscribers), said that although they sometimes received lewd emails and requests, many of their followers reached out to them with notes of gratitude for the relief from anxiety, insomnia and melancholy that their videos provided.

Some say the mundane or monotonous quality of the videos lulls us into a much-needed state of serenity. Others find comfort in being the sole focus of the A.S.M.R. actor’s tender affection and care. Or perhaps the assortment of sounds and scenarios taps into pleasing childhood memories. I grew up falling asleep hearing the sounds from my father’s home office: A computer engineer, he was continually sorting through papers, tapping keys and assembling and disassembling PCs and MACs.

Dr. Carl W. Bazil, a sleep disorders specialist at Columbia University, says A.S.M.R. videos may provide novel ways to switch off our brains.

“People who have insomnia are in a hyper state of arousal,” he said. “Behavioral treatments — guided imagery, progressive relaxation, hypnosis and meditation — are meant to try to trick your unconscious into doing what you want it to do. A.S.M.R. videos seem to be a variation on finding ways to shut your brain down.”

So far, it seems to work for me. Like many insomniacs, I have over the years tried natural remedies like valerian root or melatonin, vigorous exercise regimens and strong sleeping pills like Ambien and Lunesta. But sleep rarely came. Nothing has worked as well and consistently as watching a man in an A.S.M.R. video sort through papers and his collection of Titanic paraphernalia.

But locating the neurological underpinnings of this trippy sensation won’t be easy. Many of the scientists I reached out to shied away from the subject, saying the area is pseudoscience with a lack of published studies.

Bryson Lochte, a post-baccalaureate fellow at the National Institute on Drug Abuse who looked into A.S.M.R. for his senior thesis as a neuroscience major at Dartmouth College last year, has submitted his paper for publication in a scientific journal. Mr. Lochte said, “We focused on those areas in the brain associated with motivation, emotion and arousal to probe the effect A.S.M.R. has on the ‘reward system’ — the neural structures that trigger a dopamine surge amid pleasing reinforcements, like food or sex.

He compared A.S.M.R. to another idiosyncratic but well-studied sensation called musical frisson, which provokes a thrilling ripple of chills or goose bumps (technically termed piloerection) over one’s body in emotional response to music. Mathias Benedek, a research assistant at the University of Graz in Austria who co-authored two studies on emotion-provoked piloerection, says A.S.M.R. may be a softer, quieter version of the same phenomenon. “Frisson may simply be a stronger, full-blown response,” he said. And like A.S.M.R., the melodies that ignite frisson in one person may not in another.

Robert J. Zatorre, a professor of neuroscience at the Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital at McGill University who has also studied musical frisson, said that “the upshot of my paper is that pleasurable music elicits dopamine activity in the striatum, which is a key component of the reward system” in the brain. Writing in The New York Times last year, in an article titled “Why Music Makes Our Brain Sing,” he notes, “What may be most interesting here is when this neurotransmitter is released: not only when the music rises to a peak emotional moment, but also several seconds before, during what we might call the anticipation phase.”

Perhaps the everyday experiences that A.S.M.R. videos capture — whispering, crinkling, opening and closing of boxes — evoke similar anticipatory mechanisms, sparking memories of past pleasures that we anticipate and relive each time we watch and listen.

“The whole topic is still very much unknown,” Mr. Lochte said. “I would be very interested to see what other traits correlate with A.S.M.R sensitivity, whether it is an inherited attribute and what sort of physiological effects the sensation has on the body. All of these questions will be easy to answer with quick follow-up studies. Our study, we hope, will help lay the groundwork.”

http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2014/07/28/rustle-tingle-relax-the-compelling-world-of-a-s-m-r/?
 

readynwaiting

Contributing Member
You're not alone. I have a 16 year old with autism. He found that stuff on his own - I never knew about it. When I did (was cooking one day and looking over the counter at his computer) I got alarmed that he was watching this boring man opening a bottle of beer and unboxing something - can't recall now what it was - maybe a video game? I got a little freaked out so I asked him what it was. He replied, "ASMR", like it was nothing. Apparently he has been using this for quite some time now to settle himself down when he gets stressed out. I did some research after that on my own - it doesn't do anything for me, but seems harmless enough. I'm glad he has found a way to keep himself from getting too wound up, and it's given us a new way to "relate". Now I can say "I love you" by walking by him and tapping my nails on a jar or bowl. He knows what I'm doing and he just smiles at me like we have a secret. It's cool.
 

vessie

Has No Life - Lives on TB
For those who do not have the money to buy headphones to listen to recordings of newspaper rustling, all you need are two things...

1. One or more kittens or cats

2. A paper grocery sack with a wee window cut out on three sides leaving a little ersatz 'window shutter'.

Lay them all out on your bedroom floor with the bags open and the little 'window shutter' flapped back and you'll have all the 'paper rustling' noise you need.

I can't promise it will be like softly turned pages but Boy Howdy, you'll get all the paper ripping and tearing noise you ever wanted!

I know this first hand because I just brought home a 12 week old British Shorthair kitten who is the half brother to my three two year old Brits and they had The Time of They're Lives this morning on the family room rug while I had my coffee and watched the morning news!


cheap entertainment for one and all. RIIIIIIPPP! :D V
 

cjoi

Veteran Member
Some of us just watch television.
/sarcasm off

Seriously this looks like it's worth looking into...
 

cjoi

Veteran Member
That only ever worked if it was Carson and Ed.

Agreed, most of the nighttime programming is anything but relaxing. The last three times I watched Lenno's replacement this week the starlets got dressed up for pervy wrestling or getting smashed in the face... I'd rather watch ice melt.
 

Blue 5

Veteran Member
That only ever worked if it was Carson and Ed.

That's funny...as I read the article I immediately thought of Johnny Carson. When I was a kid, and if my folks let me stay up that late, Carson could always be counted on to lull me to sleep. I don't mean that the Tonight Show was boring, it was just something that would put me in a state where sleep would come very easily.

Another thing that always got me to sleep when I was a kid was old radio shows. A local AM station in Melbourne used to play old 40's/50's radio shows late at night. Fibber McGee & Molly, for example. Comedies, radio dramas, early sci-fi and mysteries. Worked like a champ! They have a channel on XM/Sirius that plays that sort of thing 24/7 (it's called Radio Classics, if memory serves).
 

ShyGirl

Veteran Member
I think this must have something to do with childhood memories when our brains were getting wired up. I always remember being put down for a nap (I hated taking naps during the day). I would lay there listening to small aircraft flying overhead, the soft warmth of the wind and summer sun through the window, the birds chirping and I would be out for the count. Even today when it is a beautiful sunny day and I hear a small aircraft overhead I get the same feelings of just floating away.
 

FarmerJohn

Has No Life - Lives on TB
I know the opposite can happen, too.

I've heard of people who, if they hear the sound of broken glass being swept up, immediately are swept up themselves in their experience of the horrors of the 'blitz' in London during WWII.
 

ShyGirl

Veteran Member
I know the opposite can happen, too.

I've heard of people who, if they hear the sound of broken glass being swept up, immediately are swept up themselves in their experience of the horrors of the 'blitz' in London during WWII.
Wouldn't that be like post traumatic stress syndrome?
 

vessie

Has No Life - Lives on TB
I think this must have something to do with childhood memories when our brains were getting wired up. I always remember being put down for a nap (I hated taking naps during the day). I would lay there listening to small aircraft flying overhead, the soft warmth of the wind and summer sun through the window, the birds chirping and I would be out for the count. Even today when it is a beautiful sunny day and I hear a small aircraft overhead I get the same feelings of just floating away.

I have a 'photographic' memory if that's what it's called, and as I type this, I can in my minds eye as if it's happening right now, I can see the butterfly mobile over my crib and hear the train rumble as it crosses over the Wilburton trestle in Bellevue, Wa. and as it get's close to NE 8th street just north of the trestle, it blows it's whistle.

The train tracks were just east of Surrey Downs neighborhood and my window was to the front street and faced east and maybe a mile west of the trestle which is next to I-405.

By the way, for you fishermen and women who are in the Bellevue, Wa. area, you can still catch salmon in the river/creek that runs underneath. My dad used to catch I think were steelhead salmon there when he was alive.

Oddly enough, we have another member here on this board who lived right across the street from me and I'm sure that person remembers hearing the rumble of the train and whistle too.

I close my eyes and I am now laying on my baby blanket (the one that 'disappeard' a couple of years later in an eletric swirling mass of sparkling blue green fog but that's another story and yes L.A.B., I will tell you about that experience in ALT. when I have a little time to spare!) looking up at the branches of a cherry tree with fruit ready to pick and the leaves making this lovely hypnotic sighing sound as the breeze whispers by and I am lulled to sleep. V
 

lassiesma

Senior Member
Mine is thunder. Hearing thunder, no matter what time of day or what I'm doing, leaves me almost instantly fighting to stay awake. It is scary when I'm driving. Unfortunately audio recordings of thunder do not produce the same results.
 
Top