Designed to disappear.
Alpha-range binaural beats (8–13 Hz) plus a brown-noise floor — no bowls, no melody, no surprises. The audio is meant to recede; if you notice it, it's not doing its job.
Who this is for
Writers in the second hour of a draft. Engineers in the middle of a hard refactor. Researchers reading dense papers. Designers running long Figma sessions. Anyone whose work needs sustained attention and gets derailed by ambient sound. Not for high-energy creative bursts (use the energy recipe); for the long, quiet middle of deep work where the goal is to forget the room.
What plays, and why
Layer 1 — intentionally absent
No singing bowls, no harmonic instruments, no melody. The focus recipe is the only one in AmberRoom that runs Layer 1 silent on purpose. Bowls are rich and evolving — exactly the wrong texture for cognitive work. The other layers do all the work here.
Layer 2 — sparse ambient pad
When the Pro pad layer is on, it's the gentlest pad in the system: nearly silent, no movement, just a faint harmonic warmth that takes the edge off the pure noise floor. Many users prefer this layer disabled entirely for the deepest sessions.
Layer 3 — brown noise + 10 Hz binaural beat
A low brown-noise floor at −28 dB (quieter than most ambient apps — it's a mask, not a feature) plus a 10 Hz alpha-band binaural carrier. Mid-alpha sits at the relaxed-alert sweet spot. Sustained, predictable, no surprises.
Pacing — 30 or 60 minutes
Unlike the other intents, focus has a near-flat pacing curve — no arrival, no descent, no return. The audio holds steady across the whole session because focus needs steady-state, not a journey. Loop the 30-minute recipe back-to-back for longer blocks.
The research
Wellness, not medical treatment. AmberRoom is not a substitute for clinical care.
vs. the alternatives
Common questions
Does sound actually help me focus?
For most people, yes — but not because of magic. Two effects stack. First, a low brown-noise floor masks the ambient sound that pulls attention away (HVAC clicks, distant voices, traffic). Second, alpha-range binaural beats nudge the EEG profile toward a relaxed-alert state — the same band associated with sustained attention in neurofeedback research. The combined effect is modest but reliable across long sessions.
Why no bowls? Other recipes have them.
Singing bowls are rich, evolving, and harmonically dense — exactly the qualities that pull cognitive resources toward the audio and away from your work. The focus recipe is intentionally spare: a flat brown-noise floor and the binaural carrier, nothing else. If you can hear the audio, it's not doing its job.
Alpha vs. beta — why not beta for work?
Beta (12–30 Hz) is alertness, but high beta is also where anxious activation lives. Alpha (8–13 Hz) is the wider, calmer attention band — the state of being engaged but not gripped. For sustained writing, coding, reading, the alpha recipe outperforms beta in most subjective reports. Switch to the energy recipe (low beta) if you need a morning lift, not deep work.
How long can I run it?
All day, if you want. The recipe has no harmonic content the brain habituates to in the way it does to music — the noise floor and binaural carrier are stable. Most users report effective focus blocks of 50–90 minutes between breaks, which matches the natural ultradian attention cycle. Run it for as long as you're working.
Will headphones help vs. speakers?
For the binaural component, yes — each ear needs an isolated tone for the phantom-beat illusion to land. For the noise floor, speakers are fine and arguably better (less ear fatigue across long sessions). Best setup: open-back headphones or quality speakers for an 8-hour workday.
Does this work with music or against it?
Against. The whole point is to remove musical content. If you need lyrics or melody to enjoy your work, this recipe will feel underwhelming — that's the recipe doing its job, not failing. For most people, removing music improves focus measurably; for some, it doesn't, and that's fine.