I haven’t found near infrared radiation referenced in the article - I‘m using near infrared as a brain hack, by shining a cheap 850nm LED light on my forehead. This has, over the last 2 years, enabled me to code for weeks on end, for 12+ hours a day, with only minor cognitive decline. It’s not something I really want to do, but sometimes it’s useful.
Before I started the near infrared routine (~5 minutes every other day), 5-6 hours of coding per day was all I could do - eg after coding for 8h, I noticed serious cognitive and emotional decline, and might need to do less the following day. Not anymore - nowadays I can be productive whenever I’m awake, with little side effects. Near infrared radiation is safe (thousands of studies demonstrated only very mild side effects), and is even used to treat Alzheimer’s. I have no idea why its beneficial effects are not more widely known - for some people, it’s life changing.
Sidenote: 850nm light works way better for me than 830nm.
Has anyone experimented with this?
When you tried it out, did you go as far as to hook yourself up to a brain scanner and match the flashes to the frequency and phase of your (alpha?) waves? My memory of the paper was that getting the phase and frequency right made a big difference for the effect.
Importantly, that paper also studied the benefits of entrainment matched to phase and frequency of brainwaves for learning a very specific type of dynamic visual recognition task. My take on the paper was that it seemed unlikely to extrapolate to learning generally (i.e. it wasn't "strobe yourself and learn anything 3x faster").
By contrast, the body of research here finds modest effects, but on a wide range of cognitive performance tasks and with a clear mechanistic hypothesis to explain why this might be happening. I think employing powerful medical lasers, as in the original studies, is far more plausible and tractable as a general learning-enhancement strategy than the strobe light brainwave-matching. But the effects sizes are small enough and the risks uncertain enough that it doesn't seem worth the investment to me.