results for

subject

  • addiction
  • anxiety
  • supportive learning
  • wellness
  • burnout
  • depression
  • eating disorder
  • emotional intelligence
  • mindfulness
  • stigma reduction
  • resiliency
  • stress
  • suicide
  • trauma

category

  • Supporting / working with students
  • Self-care for teachers
  • Management / administration
  • Student materials

grade

  • K
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • 6
  • 7
  • 8
  • 9
  • 10
  • 11
  • 12
  • Not applicable

resource

  • mobile app
  • podcast
  • book
  • document
  • tip sheet
  • infographic
  • promising practice
  • presentation
  • program
  • research summary
  • website
  • video
  • webinar
Results found :
Bellybio

BellyBio

This  app teaches a deep breathing technique useful for fighting anxiety and stress. A simple interface uses biofeedback to monitor your breathing. Sounds cascade with the movements of your belly, in rhythms reminiscent of waves on a beach. Charts also let you know how you’re doing. A great tool when you need to slow down and breathe.

BellyBio (Belly Biofeedback) is a triple innovation in deep abdominal breathing, biofeedback and music:

1 – Deep breathing gets addictive

BellyBio generates beautiful music & light perfectly synchronized to your deep abdominal breathing movements, making deep breathing more pleasant and rewarding than ever. You're going to love playing with your inner balloon.

2 – Biofeedback gets simple

BellyBio turns your iPhone/iPod Touch into a highly-sensitive deep breathing sensor providing a real-time, objective stress-level index based on your breathing pattern. Biofeedback thus becomes more simple and powerful --not to mention affordable-- than ever, so you can now know for sure who's the coolest dude in the neighborhood.

3 – Music gets breathable

The first "Abdominal Music Player", BellyBio makes music play in sync with your breathing, which in return makes your breathing calm down. Is it you who follow the music or the music that follows you? You don't listen to music anymore, you merge with it.

Here is a video produced by the University of British Columbia, a physician's review

iOS only

Why we’re recommending this resource:

  • Objectivity: minimal to no biases or affiliations with a company selling products or promoting a questionable agenda
  • Currency: information that is recent or has been recently endorsed (Updated 2015)

Description

Resource type
mobile app
Subject
emotional intelligence
resiliency
stress
wellness
Category
Student materials
Grade
K
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
Link to resource
Content Owner
External
Tags
STRESS
HEALTHY DEVELOPMENT
EMOTIONAL HEALTH
WORRY