The best background sounds between meetings
Finding the right background sound can transform your meetings background experience. This activity engages your Recovery + Attention Restoration cognitive systems, which respond best to specific types of ambient sound.
Research says: Natural sounds shift the nervous system from fight-or-flight to rest-and-digest mode in under 7 minutes. The effect is automatic and strongest in people who are already stressed.
— Scientific Reports (2017)
추천 사운드
forest sounds
Attention Restoration Theory (Kaplan & Kaplan): natural sounds recharge voluntary attention. 10 minutes between meetings restores focus for the next call.
Recommended: 35-50 dBocean waves
The slow rhythm (10-15 sec) encourages deep breathing, counteracting the shallow breathing and tension that accumulates in back-to-back meetings.
Recommended: 35-50 dBrain sounds
Gentle parasympathetic activation between high-stimulation meetings. Reduces the cortisol spike that multiple video calls produce.
Recommended: 35-45 dB지금 시도
Listen on Softly
프로 팁
Between meetings, close your eyes for 5 minutes with nature sounds. The combination of visual rest + natural sounds produces faster attention restoration than either alone.
자주 묻는 질문
Why am I so exhausted after back-to-back meetings?
Video calls demand sustained directed attention (maintaining eye contact, processing faces, self-monitoring your camera image). This depletes the same attentional resources needed for focus work. Natural sounds help restore these resources through "soft fascination" — they capture attention without demanding it.
What does research say about sounds for meetings background?
Natural sounds shift the nervous system from fight-or-flight to rest-and-digest mode in under 7 minutes. The effect is automatic and strongest in people who are already stressed. (Gould van Praag et al., Scientific Reports, 2017)
What volume should I use for meetings background?
For meetings background, set your volume to 35-50 dB. This range is based on acoustic research — loud enough to mask distracting noise, quiet enough to avoid auditory fatigue during extended listening.