h a l f b a k e r yI didn't say you were on to something, I said you were on something.
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
Please log in.
Before you can vote, you need to register.
Please log in or create an account.
|
I sleep heavily but now and again get a
niggling worry that I'll oversleep. This
incubates for a few hours and I wake up
about 3 hours too soon. By the time I'm
awake enough to check the time, I'm too
roused to fall back to sleep easily (and
I'm
aware that I've been tossing and turning
fitfully for a while). After a few hours of
this mild torture the clock goes off and I
fully awaken to start a groggy day.
This clock will use EEG or an eye motion
detector to recognize the early stages of
arousal and lull the subject back into
deeper sleep, perhaps using bio-
feedback,
soothing music or aromas. The strength
of
the correction would be meted according
to the time left before the regular alarm,
and would never be so strong as to
override physiological needs or
emergency
response.
[link]
|
|
obligatory zen alarm clock joke. |
|
|
It's taken me years to figure it out, but I can ususaly just wake up when I want to these days... no noisy alarm clocks (although i still have one set for a half hour after I want to get up just in case... wake up and turn it off first thing) |
|
|
Something like this idea would be interesting to see in the market. |
|
|
If it wasn't for the headgear necessary for the eyemotion detector, I could see this a worthwhile invention. If I were you, I'd build it into a bed, but the clock idea gets a [+] anyway. |
|
|
I don't think the biofeedback is
necessary to the idea. The clock could
simply play a gentle, reassuring,
background noise all night. In the half-
hour before the alarm, this could
change or be added to so that, if you
are awake, or your mind is alert enough
in sleep, you know its almost time to
get up. |
|
|
Aroma? If I had one of these, I would hook it up to a morphine pump. |
|
|
Long haul truck drivers have a saying: "If you need an alarm clock to wake up, then you haven't slept long enough". |
|
|
Why not a programmed music pattern where the music gets more bouncy toward wakeup time and even worse after. A quiet voice over between tunes could tell you just how much time you have to sleep hence you have gentle assurance without even opening your eyes. The whole contraption could be wired to your pillow rather than your head |
|
|
I'm not sure about the voice telling me the time (i think that'd get into dreams and freak me out)... The music part of Tasman's idea though seems kinda cool... you can accomplish about the same with multiple playlists set to timers... (sorta) |
|
| |