Submitted:
25 December 2025
Posted:
26 December 2025
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Abstract
Keywords:
1. Introduction
1.1. Glycine and Serine in Thermoregulation and Sleep
1.2. Nitric Oxide and the Thermoregulatory Sleep Gate
1.3. Botanical and Cultural Origin of Glycine Intake
Globally Important Crops as Glycine Reservoirs
Cultural Foodways and Perceived Calming or Warming Effects
Bridging to Clinical and Mechanistic Approaches
1.4. Audio Patterning and Auditory Beat Stimulation in Physiology
1.5. Objective
2. Methods
2.1. Clinical Data Handling: Pre-Sleep Glycine Trials
2.1.1. Subjective Sleep Quality in Adults with Chronic Sleep Complaints
2.1.2. Subjective and Objective Sleep in Adults with Sleep Complaints
2.1.3. Glycine Under Partial Sleep Restriction
2.1.4. Methodological quality and limitations
2.2. Basis for the Vibrational Signature and Evaporation Sequence of Zwitterionic Glycine
2.2.1. Molecular Basis of the Vibrational Signature and Zwitterionic Glycine as the Reference Structure
2.2.2. Normal Modes and Frequencies
2.2.3. Frequency mapPing from Molecular Vibration to Audio
2.2.4. Mode Intensities and Per Mode Amplitudes
2.2.5. From Molecular Spectrum to Audio Waveform
2.2.6. Grouping Modes by Chemical Motif
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- Group A (NH3+ and CH2 “edges”): N H stretching modes in the 3000 to 3300 cm-1 range, CH2 stretches around 2900 to 3000 cm-1, and associated higher frequency deformations that carry much of the “edge” of the molecule.
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- Group B (COO- and backbone): carboxylate asymmetric and symmetric stretches (approximately 1400 to 1700 cm-1), C N stretches, and mixed modes that define the zwitterionic backbone.
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- Group C (skeletal and lattice): lower frequency modes below about 1200 cm-1, including skeletal deformations and lattice or collective motions in the solid.
2.3. Amplitude Envelopes: Pharmacokinetic Primary Stimulus and Evaporation Reference
2.3.1. Primary Pharmacokinetic Absorption Elimination Envelope
2.3.2. Evaporation Reference Envelope (Four Stage Artistic Design)
- Stage I (“sharp edges”): early dominance of Group A modes (NH3+ and CH2 stretches), conveying the exposed, high energy edges of the molecule.
- Stage II (“structural identity”): increasing weight of Group B modes (COO- and backbone), representing the stable zwitterionic identity.
- Stage III (“skeletal memory”): gradual shift toward Group C modes (low frequency skeletal and lattice motions), evoking a slower, heavier remainder.
- Stage IV (“bath”): overall decay of all glycine modes into a low level residual field that can optionally be combined with a broad band thermal bath noise floor.
2.4. Sigil Construction and Animation
- Group A: NH3+/CH2 stretching region (nu_i >= 2900 cm^-1)
- Group B: COO-/backbone region (1200 cm^-1 <= nu_i < 2900 cm^-1)
- Group C: skeletal / low-frequency region (nu_i < 1200 cm^-1)
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- Group A (NH3+/CH2): A(u) = max(0, 1 - u / 0.4)
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- Group B (COO-/backbone): B(u) = exp( - (u - 0.5)^2 / (2 * 0.15^2) )
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- Group C (skeletal): C(u) = min( max(0, (u - 0.2) / 0.4),
- omega = 2 * pi * N_rot / T_total
- with N_rot = 1. The instantaneous angle of each mode was then:
2.5. Audio and Video Generation and Playback Recommendations
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- Sampling rate: 22,050 Hz
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- Channels: stereo (dual mono; identical signal in left and right channels)
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- Bit depth: 16 bit PCM (little endian)
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- Total duration: 300 seconds (5:00)
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- Amplitude: normalised to avoid clipping, with peaks below full scale and a moderate RMS level suitable for comfortable listening
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- Keep playback volume in a comfortable mid range (avoiding both near silence and sustained maximum output).
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- Use the same playback device and loudspeaker position when comparing conditions (pharmacokinetic primary stimulus versus evaporation reference stimulus).
2.6. Ethics Statement
3. Results
3.1. Summary of Pre-Sleep Glycine Clinical Findings
3.2. Audio File Characteristics for Pharmacokinetic and Evaporation Reference Stimuli
3.3. Visual Sigil: Temporal Evolution
4. Discussion
4.1. Glycine as NO Linked Thermoregulatory Modulator
4.2. Audio Patterning as a Molecule-Anchored Physiological Bridge
4.3. Interpretation of Glycine Sonification and Sigil
4.4. Novelty and Positioning
4.5. Limitations
4.6. Future Research
5. Conclusions
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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