GROOVS combines five evidence-backed techniques into a single attention training protocol, designed to reduce the mental interference that blocks peak performance.
Each technique has published research behind it. The combination is novel.
There's a simple equation behind GROOVS: Performance = potential − interference.[1][2] When you're under pressure, the part of your mind that should be directing your focus gets overwhelmed by the part that's scanning for threats. Replaying mistakes, anticipating problems, running commentary you never asked for, and distractions pulling at you from every direction.
That's the interference. GROOVS trains you to notice when it's taken over, and calmly return your attention to what matters.
You already have the potential. The problem is what gets between you and using it: the distracting thoughts, the anxiety, the self-consciousness that pulls your attention away from what matters.
Researchers call this performance interference: anxiety hijacks your attention system, making you more reactive to distractions and less able to stay focused.[3]
Decades of research confirm that attention is trainable. The practices GROOVS is built on (focused awareness, open awareness, rhythmic breathing, rhythmic tapping, and music-driven engagement) each have published peer-reviewed support.
What hasn't been tested is the specific GROOVS protocol as a combined system. What we can say is that each building block is grounded in science, and the combination is designed with that evidence in mind.
The practice
Choose your mode: rhythmic breathing or rhythmic tapping. Then pick what to focus on: the physical sensation, a sound in the music, or the visual rhythm on screen. When your mind drifts, notice and bring it back. That's one rep.
The benefit
Strengthens concentration, sustained attention, and emotional regulation.[4][5][10][11] Less reactive under pressure, more present in the moment.
The practice
Just listen to the GROOV (no tapping or breathing). Instead of narrowing in, hold a wide, receptive awareness of everything around you (sounds, sensations, thoughts) without fixating on any single one. When your attention narrows, gently expand back out.
The benefit
Activates receptive awareness networks[4] and promotes creative thinking.[6] The open state where unexpected connections happen.
Evidence strength ratings reflect published peer-reviewed research for each technique independently, not for the combined GROOVS protocol.
Focused awareness is one of the most studied practices in mindfulness meditation research.[7]
The core skill: choose something to focus on, notice when your mind wanders[8], and bring it back. Each return is a rep. A meta-analysis of 87 studies found a small but reliable improvement in attention.[9] Brain imaging shows regular practice changes how the brain responds to stress and distraction.[10][11]
Why this is important: When you can control where your attention goes, you can control what affects you. Under pressure, distracting thoughts lose their power. You stay with what matters.
One study showed that brief daily practice of around 13 minutes can improve attention, working memory, and mood, but it takes around 8 weeks of consistent practice to see measurable changes.[12]
In Rhythmic Breathing and Tapping modes, you choose one attentional anchor and synchronize it to the music's rhythm. When your mind wanders, you notice and return. That's the training.
The science
A meta-analysis of 87 studies found mindfulness meditation produces a small but reliable improvement in attention. Modest individually, meaningful when sustained.[9]
After mindfulness training, the brain's threat-response center becomes less reactive while present-moment awareness regions become more active.[10] Training also shifts processing toward a more direct, experiential mode, less caught up in internal narratives.[11]
For athletes, mindfulness programs show positive effects on flow and reduced competitive anxiety, though research quality varies.[13][14] For professionals, a meta-analysis of 56 RCTs found workplace mindfulness programs consistently reduce stress and burnout.[15]
What we're still learning
Whether rhythm-synchronized practice produces the same effects as traditional silent mindfulness meditation. Whether rhythmic engagement enhances or competes with the attentional anchor.
Where focused awareness narrows in on one thing, open awareness does the opposite: a broad, receptive awareness of everything happening around you without directing attention to any one thing in particular.[7] Brain imaging confirms these practices work differently at a neural level and train different cognitive skills.[4]
Why this is important: Some moments call for locked-in focus. Others call for the opposite: noticing everything, catching what you'd otherwise miss. Athletes reading the field. Musicians hearing the ensemble, not just their own part. Creatives spotting unexpected connections. Open awareness trains this skill.
A Yale study combining music listening with open awareness found measurable improvements in nervous system regulation and brain activity.[17] Early evidence supporting the kind of music-and-mindfulness combination GROOVS is built on, though larger controlled studies are needed.
Open Awareness mode. After you've built some focused awareness practice, you move into this: listening to a GROOV with no tapping or breathing. Let your attention hold everything at once (sounds, sensations, thoughts) without fixating on any one. When your attention narrows, gently expand back out.
The science
Focused and open awareness activate distinct brain networks. Focused awareness engages goal-directed attention, while open awareness activates receptive awareness and salience detection.[4] A review confirmed that focused awareness, open awareness, and loving-kindness meditation each produce distinct effects on attention, cognitive control, and creative thinking.[5]
Open awareness promotes the generation of novel ideas (what researchers call divergent thinking), while focused awareness does not reliably produce the same creative benefit.[6] A meta-analysis found a moderate positive effect of mindfulness on creativity overall.[16]
A community-based Yale study combining music listening with mindfulness found improvements in heart rate variability and brain electrical activity in 38 participants.[17] This is early evidence that music combined with mindfulness produces measurable physiological effects, though the small sample and lack of a control condition mean larger studies are needed.
What we're still learning
No study has directly compared focused-only vs. open-only vs. combined training using music. Best sequencing within a program like GROOVS is an open question.
Slow rhythmic breathing at around 4.5 to 6.5 breaths per minute is one of the most well-researched techniques in the protocol. A meta-analysis of 223 studies confirmed it strengthens the body's stress regulation, both during practice and across multi-session programs.[18] It also improves mood and lowers blood pressure.[19][20][21]
Why this is important: Breath is the fastest path to regulating your nervous system. Slow, rhythmic breathing shifts you out of reactive mode and into a calm, focused state: the state where peak performance happens.
A published study directly combined rhythmic breathing with music, the closest existing evidence for the GROOVS approach.[23]
Music can pace breathing in roughly half of subjects, with musicians showing greater response.[24] Individual breathing rates vary, meaning the app's fixed tempo is an approximation, not a clinical prescription.[25]
Rhythmic Breathing mode. A large white dot rotates continuously around the circle. Black dots mark the transition points: one signals breathe in, the next signals breathe out.
The science
The largest slow-breathing meta-analysis to date (223 studies) confirmed that slow-paced breathing increases nervous system regulation, during sessions, immediately afterward, and across multi-session programs.[18]
Breathing at resonance frequency improves autonomic balance, mood, and blood pressure.[19] A systematic review catalogued wide-ranging physiological effects including improved autonomic function and reduced arousal.[20] The mechanism: slow breathing stimulates the vagus nerve, activating brain areas involved in calm, focused states.[22]
Music-Guided Resonance Breathing combined slow breathing at ~6 breaths per minute with attentive listening to composed music, the closest existing analog to the GROOVS approach.[23] Music can entrain breathing rhythm in a substantial proportion of listeners, with musically trained individuals showing stronger response.[24]
However, individual optimal breathing rates vary. One study found a person's ideal rate changed between sessions in two-thirds of participants.[25] A fundamental limitation of any fixed-tempo system without biofeedback.
What we're still learning
Whether GROOVS breathing tempo is optimal for all users, or whether personalized calibration would produce better outcomes.[25]
Not everyone connects with breath-based practice. For some, a physical action works better. GROOVS offers rhythmic tapping as an alternative: you tap along with the music's rhythm as your anchor.[26]
This is the technique with the thinnest research base, and we want to be upfront about that. Some studies suggest that basic, repetitive tapping doesn't challenge your brain enough to really train attention.[30]
But GROOVS tapping isn't basic tapping. Lab studies have used tapping that just repeats at a fixed interval (something your brain can do on autopilot). GROOVS tapping asks you to follow changing musical rhythms and hit multiple points across the beat, which should keep the brain engaged. Whether that actually delivers the training benefit hasn't been tested directly.
Why this is important: The right anchor matters. For some, breath doesn't click; it feels forced or triggers anxiety. Tapping gives you another way in: an active, physical anchor that keeps you in the present. For the right person, it's the thing that makes the practice stick.
One study found that offering a choice of anchor matters: if one doesn't fit, you're more likely to stay engaged with another.[26] A systematic review of rhythm-based training programs showed promising effects on mental control, though the evidence base is still developing.[31]
Tapping mode. A large white dot rotates around the circle. Black dots mark the points to tap. Smaller white dots indicate an optional secondary rhythm.
The science
Tapping in time with rhythm activates the brain's motor planning, timing, and coordination systems. Specifically, the cerebello-thalamo-cortical networks central to rhythm processing.[27][28] A comprehensive review documents the breadth of sensorimotor synchronization research.[29]
People differ genuinely in which anchor type works best, and poor fit may contribute to dropout.[26]
A systematic review found rhythm training shows positive effects on cognitive control, though methodological quality varies.[31]
What we're still learning
Whether tapping to changing musical rhythms prevents the automatic, mind-wandering pattern seen in simple repetitive tapping studies.[30] Whether sensorimotor engagement adds training value beyond music alone.
When you listen to rhythmic music, your brain naturally locks onto the beat. Neural activity aligns with the rhythm.[32][33] This gets stronger with musical experience.[34]
GROOVs are composed with repeating structures and no vocals. This minimizes distraction and, more importantly, lets your mind wander naturally (which is exactly the point).
Here's why: as anything becomes routine, your brain frees up resources and your mind drifts.[36] Far from a flaw, that drift is the condition you need to train. When your attention wanders, you notice it and bring it back. That's the practice.
Mind-wandering isn't a passive lapse; it's an active process that uses real mental resources.[8] So noticing it and returning your attention is genuinely training your brain's attention-control system.
GROOVS appears to be the first known protocol to deliberately use musical repetition this way.
Why this is important: Music is what makes the practice work. It locks your brain onto a rhythm, creates the conditions for natural mind-wandering, and (honestly) keeps you coming back. Without music, attention training is another chore. With music, it becomes something you want to do.
One study showed that the brain's ability to synchronize with musical rhythm is measurable and robust.[34] The deliberate use of musical repetition to induce mind-wandering as a training stimulus is a novel application of established science.[8][36]
Music is the engagement vehicle across all modes, providing the rhythmic anchor for breathing and tapping, creating natural drift conditions, and making the practice compelling enough to sustain.
The science
Your brain locks onto rhythm automatically. When you hear a steady beat, your brain's internal rhythms sync up and your attention tracks what's coming next: a phenomenon researchers call Dynamic Attending Theory.[32] Brain imaging confirms this happens at multiple layers of neural activity.[33]
This ability gets stronger with musical experience.[34] Music activates the brain's motor systems even when you're sitting still (your body responds to rhythm automatically).[35]
As a task becomes routine, your brain needs fewer resources to maintain it, which frees up capacity for mind-wandering.[36] Mind-wandering isn't passive; it actively uses mental resources.[8] So noticing it and returning your attention genuinely trains the brain's control system.
What we're still learning
Whether specific musical features produce meaningfully different training outcomes. Whether repetition-induced mind-wandering operates the same way when music is the primary attended stimulus rather than background.
The deliberate engineering of mind-wandering as a training feature has no direct precedent in published literature.
Informed by 100+ peer-reviewed papers. 36 cited on this page.
Same science as meditation. Way more fun.
No download required · Runs in your browser
GROOVS is a music-based attention training app. Instead of sitting quietly, you train your focus through rhythmic breathing or tapping, using music as the engagement vehicle.
Anyone whose performance suffers when their head gets in the way. The musician before the show. The athlete in the moment. The executive under pressure. The creative chasing flow.
Nobody eliminates mental interference. The people who perform best under pressure just get better at noticing and refocusing. That's the skill. That's what you're building.
Curious about the research behind it? Explore the science →
If that works better for you, absolutely. But if sitting still makes you restless, GROOVS might be your thing.
Yes. A free account unlocks the core GROOVS™ library. Premium and VIP plans unlock the full library and more.
No. GROOVS runs entirely in your browser on mobile or desktop. No app store, no install.
A free account unlocks the core GROOVS™ library. Click here to register →
Pick a GROOV. Choose breathing or tapping mode. Then train. The whole thing takes 5 minutes. Focus, wander, notice, return. That's a rep. Repeat.
Yes. GROOVS is a web app that works on any device: mobile, tablet, or desktop. A native app is on the roadmap but our first priority was making sure everyone could access it, regardless of device.
Most people notice something in their first few sessions: a quieter mind, a feeling of reset. Measurable changes in attention build over weeks of consistent practice. Think of it like fitness: the daily compound effect matters more than any single session.
The research suggests 13 minutes daily works best. But we're not robots. Do what you can, when you can. Consistency beats perfection every time.
Hip hop. Electronic. Acoustic. R&B. World. Rock. More coming. Every GROOV is originally composed with repeating rhythms and harmonies designed to train your mind. We're building a library that sounds like your playlist, not a spa.
Yes, we plan to add new GROOVS regularly. We're just getting started.
Have an idea for a GROOV? Send us a request →
The music is 100% human-made, written, performed, and produced by real musicians. We do use AI to help run other parts of the product and business more efficiently, so we can focus more resources on supporting the musicians who make GROOVS sound the way it does.
The goal isn't a quiet mind. It's noticing, quickly, when your attention drifts, and gently bringing it back. Every refocus is training the brain.
The skill being built (attention regulation) is the same; the path (rhythmic music vs silence) is different. If silent practice works for you, stick with it. GROOVS is for people who find sitting still harder than focusing on something.
Silence puts the whole burden on you. Music gives your attention a rhythm to anchor to. Engaging enough to keep you with it, simple enough to leave room for the training to happen underneath.
Attention is a skill, not a fixed trait. Studies show measurable changes in focus and mind-wandering with regular practice. It's like fitness for what you pay attention to.
Not directly. What it builds is faster noticing and gentler refocusing, useful when you're under pressure. Many people find that translates to feeling more in control. Calm is often a side effect, not the goal.
Breathing mode anchors your attention to the rhythm of your breath, guided by the moving dot. Tapping mode anchors to the rhythm of your finger or foot tapping. Same training, different on-ramp.
Whichever feels less effortful. Breathing is the most common starting point. If you find yourself fighting the breath, switch to tapping.
The single thing you're paying attention to during a session: the air through your nose, the sound of the music, the feeling of your tap, or the visual rhythm of the dots. One thing at a time.
No. That's the training. Your mind wandering is normal. Noticing it and returning to your point of focus. Wandering more isn't failing; refocusing is the win.
Optional. Closing your eyes amplifies the training because there's nothing visual to fall back on. Most people work up to it after a few sessions with eyes open.
If you keep returning your attention when it wanders, you're doing it right. There's no perfect session. The practice compounds over time, not within any single session.
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