Clinical Integration

Technology designed for real therapy rooms.

Resonance tools are built to sit alongside EMDR, trauma-focused CBT, parts work, and other evidence-based approaches—not to replace them. This page is for clinicians, clinics, and programs exploring how EEG, music, and AI might fit into their work.

Outpatient · Intensive programs · Veteran-focused services
Where It Fits

Clinical use cases we’re designing for.

We prototype with specific scenarios in mind, especially where traditional talk therapy alone can struggle or stall. A few examples:

Clients who can’t tolerate detailed trauma narrative.

For clients who find retelling their story overwhelming, EEG-chromatic feedback and adaptive music can support regulation work without detailed verbal exposure.

Veterans with chronic hypervigilance and shutdown cycles.

Real-time visual feedback helps externalize patterns of arousal and collapse, giving both client and therapist a shared map for pacing interventions.

Intensive treatment blocks and groups.

Structured EEG + music sessions can serve as grounding or integration practices within intensive trauma programs or skills groups.

How Clinicians Use It
As a regulation-focused adjunct.

Sessions begin or end with short EEG + music segments designed to support grounding, then return to talk-based or somatic work.

As a way to “show” progress over time.

Patterns in EEG-chromatic output across weeks can help clients see subtle gains in tolerance, flexibility, and recovery from triggers.

As a co-regulation tool.

Therapist and client can watch the same display, experiment with breathing, music changes, and movement, and make meaning together in real time.

Clinical Workflow

A simple arc from intake to integration.

We design workflows to be realistic for busy caseloads. Below is a typical pattern we’re testing in pilot settings; it will evolve as we gather feedback.

01 · Intake & Consent

Clarifying fit and boundaries

The clinician assesses whether EEG + music work is appropriate, discusses goals, explains limitations, and obtains informed consent for any data collection.

02 · Baseline Sessions

Mapping patterns

Short, low-intensity sessions are used to observe baseline arousal patterns and how the client responds to different musical and visual structures.

03 · Targeted Integration

Pairing with trauma work

Once safety is established, EEG + music segments are used to support specific phases of trauma work (e.g., preparation, stabilization, or post-processing).

04 · Review & Meaning-Making

Looking at the arc together

Periodic reviews help client and clinician reflect on patterns, gains, and remaining challenges, using both subjective experience and observable trends.

Case Snapshot · Veteran

“I don’t want to talk about it—but I don’t want to keep living like this.”

A combat veteran in his 30s presents with chronic hypervigilance, nightmares, and emotional numbing. Traditional narrative processing repeatedly leads to shutdown. EEG + music sessions are introduced as a way to practice noticing and modulating arousal without explicit trauma narrative.

Over several weeks, he begins to identify specific musical structures that help him “come back down” after spikes and uses them between sessions. Only later does detailed trauma processing become tolerable.

Case Snapshot · Civilian

“I feel nothing until I feel everything.”

A civilian client with developmental trauma oscillates between flat affect and overwhelm. Chromatic visualizations help externalize these shifts: the screen stays muted for long stretches, then flares during moments of connection or activation.

Watching this pattern together allows therapist and client to name in-between states, celebrate micro-shifts, and design sessions that respect limited windows of tolerance.

Safety & Ethics

Built to respect your license—and your clients.

We know what it means to hold a clinical license. Our tools are designed with clear boundaries: you remain responsible for clinical judgment, and technology remains a support—not a silent third party making decisions behind the scenes.

Key principles for clinical use

  • Optional, never required. Clients can opt out of tech at any time without penalty.
  • Transparent. Clients know what’s being recorded, what’s being processed, and why.
  • Non-diagnostic. Outputs are used for exploration and regulation, not for labeling or gatekeeping care.
  • Clinician-led. You choose when and how to use tools; there is no “auto-pilot” mode for trauma work.
Pilot Sites & Consultation

Interested in becoming a pilot site or consulting on design?

We’re actively shaping how these tools function in the real world. If you run a clinic, program, or private practice that serves trauma survivors or veterans, we’d love to talk.

Start a conversation