So I decided to check out what I-Doser had to offer, and see if the claims would actually hold up. However, the combination of our cultural curiosity about altered consciousness and experimentation with drugs, and the vast wonders of the internet (where YouTube reaction videos have teens swearing they’ve had an out-of-body experience) mean that the lack of rigorous scientific proof doesn’t necessarily sway us from the promise of audio drugs. I-Doser claims that the specialized doses will match “the intended Hertz level that your brain would be at while having the chosen experience,” but there have been no formal studies proving that this has any scientific basis, and most researchers treat the trend with skepticism at best. There has been some research that show binaural beats can trigger EEG activity and affect mood and sleep cycles, but the claim that it can reproduce the effects of acid? Probably not as scientifically valid. Picture two different vibrating waveforms entering your left and right ears and meeting in your brain, which then creates a synchronized version of the two, at a completely different frequency - the binaural beat. Discovered by Heinrich Wilhelm Dove in 1839, a binaural beat is experienced when two constant tones are played at different frequencies in each ear. Their product is essentially a form of ‘binaural beat therapy’ and that’s been around for a while. While these digital drugs have had some pushback from people who see it as a kind of gateway encouraging actual drug usage, I-Doser’s 10 million users prove that this internet trend is not dying out anytime soon.īut has I-Doser really figured out a way to get people high off an audio recording? Not really. I-Doser Labs, the leading producer of these experiences, offers CD, MP3, and computer and mobile-based doses, promising a scientific and safe way to synchronize your brain waves and achieve an altered state of being. Drug dealers are no longer on the streets purveyors of ‘audio drugs’ claim they can replicate the effects of cocaine, LSD, and ecstasy, as well as a host of other experiences, simply through a digital sound recording.