DEUTSCHES ORCHESTER FORUM   DIE UNIVERSALE STIMME DER AKADEMISCHEN WISSENSCHAFT IN DER MUSIKAUFFÜHRUNG
ARCHIVE – MEDICINE

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Introduktion zur Universität der Zukunft

Projekte

Peter Hübner’s Cosmic Educational Program

Peter Hübner
Developer of the
University of the Future

ARCHIV

MEDICINE

CHRONOBIOLOGY

Periodic Duration

Pain Sensitivity

Activity Rhythms

Cosmic Rhythms

Three Way Structure

Endogenous Rhythms

Muscular Rhythms

Pain Wave Rhythms

Circulation & Respiration

Puls Breath Frequency

Rhythms in Sleep

Therapeutic Changes

Inhalation & Heart Period

Mother & Child

Heart & Arterial Oscillation

Phase Coordination

Walk & Heart Rhythm

Breathing & Heart Rhythm

Autonomic Rhythm

Hierarchy of Rhythms

Spontaneous Rhythms

Muscular Blood
Circulation

Healing & Resistance

Spontaneous Rhythms

Conclusion

Literature









Prof. Dr. med. Gunther Hildebrandt  • Chronobiological Aspects of Music Physiology



Some of the rhythmic procedures in the organism can be directly experienced by us, and can even be more or less voluntarily influenced, such as the heart and breathing rhythm. Others, such as the 90 -120 minute basal activity rhythm (illustration 2) or the side rhythm of blood distribution which shows most clearly in the side change of nose breathing with a periodic duration of 6-8 hours (illustration 3), are hardly noticed by us, and must be shown by appropriate measured values.





Illustration 2

Plot of sensitivity to pain of a front tooth determined by cold stimulus application (so-called beneficial time of cold stimu­lus) of 3 test subjects on 3 different days. Determination of the wave of pain occurred in intervals of 15-30 minutes. The values are shown in per cent of the individual daily means. The rhythm of the sensitivity to pain is the same as the one which forms the sleep cycles during a night’s sleep.

(According to POLLMANN and HILDEBRANDT 1982)





Illustration 3

Semi-quantitative presentation of the rhythm of the sides of the nose of 4 people in the course of 24 hours. The full swing of the curves shows that approx. 80% of the total respiratory air is inhaled, due to the nasal mucous membrane going down on one side, through only one side of the nose.
MOZ = mean local time.

(Own studies)