Misophonia Reflex Finder
Screenshots
People experience misophonia as an extreme emotional response to a trigger stimulus such as an eating or breathing sound. The emotions are generally immediate and involuntary.
But there is a physical misophonia reflex that occurs along with the extreme emotions. The physical reflex actually occurs first, and the physical reflex jerks out the extreme emotions.
Based on over 200 individuals that Tom Dozier has worked with, he finds that 95% have a physical reflex that is a fundamental part of their misophonia. He tests every patient for their physical reflex because understanding exactly how a person's body responds to the trigger is critical for their treatment.
This app allows you to record a sound trigger and then reduce the intensity of the trigger so that your you have only a tiny, physical response to the trigger. It does this in 2 ways.
1) You can reduce the volume so that it is barely audible. When a trigger is very, very soft, you do not hear 100% of the subtle sounds. Because of this, the misophonic reflex will either be weak or not even occur. You can then bring up the volume very slowly until you first start to trigger. You also keep the length (duration) of the trigger short, generally 1 second or less.
2) You can reduce the length of the trigger sound so it doesn't sound like the real trigger
When the trigger sound is only 0.2 seconds long, it is usually is not recognizable as a trigger, so you do not have a misophonic response. You can hear the "click" sound, but not trigger to it. Then you can increase the length of the trigger to 0.25 seconds and try again. At some point you will have a VERY TINY misophonia reflex response.
Under these conditions (low volume, short length, or both), most people can identify some part of their body that moved. For example, why may feel a slight muscle jerk in their shoulders.
The app also provides information provided by Tom Dozier about treating and managing your misophonia based on your physical reflex.
Examples of physical reflexes that Tom has seen in patients include contraction of muscles in the face, upper neck, lower neck, shoulders up, shoulders forward, chest, upper arms, lower arms, hands (open or close), face, jaw, abs, buttock, thighs, calves, toes, and many combinations of these. Others have reported a short breath, head jerking to the right, unidentified movement in the chest cavity, stomach constriction, intestine constriction, esophagus constriction, unpleasant sexual arousal, and urge to urinate.
The app includes a sound file editor that allows you to trim the recording so that the trigger sound you want to use is at the start of the recording. This allows you to make a long recording, and edit it to have a single usable trigger. (But you may want to have someone else do this for you.
App Privacy
The developer, Thomas Dozier, has not provided details about its privacy practices and handling of data to Apple. For more information, see the developer’s privacy policy
No Details Provided
The developer will be required to provide privacy details when they submit their next app update.
Information
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Category
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Age Rating4+
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PriceFree
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Size35.17 MB
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ProviderThomas Dozier
Languages
English
Copyright
©
2004-2024 Thomas Dozier. All rights reserved.