Abstract
BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES: 40 Hz sensory stimulation is being explored for cognitive health applications, but sustained use may be constrained by the listenability of simple 40 Hz auditory stimuli. We examined user-perceived acceptability and implementation considerations for 40 Hz auditory stimulation delivered by embedding a pure 40 Hz sine wave within nature-based soundscapes. METHODS: Eleven adults aged ≥ 40 years in Seoul, Republic of Korea were assigned to waves or forest soundscapes (between-participants) and completed a within-session exposure to two conditions within the assigned set: 40 Hz-OFF (soundscape-only) and 40 Hz-ON (soundscape plus an additively layered 40 Hz sine wave). Each condition comprised seven cycles of 50 s playback and 10 s silence (~7 min) with a 10 min washout. After completing both listening blocks, participants provided brief comparative session-end ratings to aid recall and then completed a semi-structured interview focused on detectability and comparative impressions while blinded to condition identity. Following debriefing about the 40 Hz manipulation, participants completed a session-end 7-point Likert appraisal of the intended intervention stimulus (40 Hz-ON). Interview transcripts were analyzed using thematic analysis and interpreted using the Theoretical Framework of Acceptability and Proctor et al.'s implementation outcomes as sensitizing frameworks. RESULTS: Session-end appraisals suggested that the 40 Hz-integrated soundscape (40 Hz-ON) was generally listenable, with mid-to-high comfort and immersion (medians = 5) and low unpleasantness (median = 2), while perceived artificiality spanned the full scale (range 1-7) and overall preference was moderate (median = 4). Interviews indicated that acceptability was governed by perceptual integration: natural blending supported "backgroundable" listening, whereas salient low-frequency rumble or a mechanical/artificial timbre contributed to negative reactions. Implementation-relevant themes highlighted context fit (bedtime vs. morning routines), low-friction automation (timers/scheduling), and conservative acoustic safeguards (gentle onset and default levels). CONCLUSIONS: In a single-session evaluation among adults aged ≥ 40 years, embedding a 40 Hz sine wave within nature-based soundscapes was generally acceptable, with acceptability sensitive to perceptual integration and usage context. This qualitative study does not assess clinical or cognitive efficacy. These findings inform implementation considerations for cognitive health-oriented delivery, including space-oriented playback options, simplified automation, conservative acoustic safeguards, and coherence-supportive user guidance without overclaiming.