Playlist Specifications
- 1. Deep Work - Verbal [ENGINE] - writing, reading, hard debugging
- 2. Deep Work - Analytical [ENGINE] - routine coding, math, spreadsheets
- 3. Admin / Shallow Work [PERSONAL] - email, chores, expense reports
- 4. Creative / Diffuse Thinking [PERSONAL, ENGINE-assisted]
- 5. Downshift - Stress Reduction [ENGINE]
- 6. Emotional Processing [PERSONAL]
- 7. Walk / Recover [PERSONAL]
- 8. Sleep Wind-Down [ENGINE]
- 9. Mood Lift [PERSONAL]
- 10. Intimacy [PERSONAL]
- Quick-reference
Ten playlists, one clear job each. Every design rule traces to a verdict in 01-evidence-review.md (cited as §-references).
Two kinds of spec:
- [ENGINE] - rendered by the CognitionFM generative engine (
recipes/*.yamlimplements the parameter block). These are also the publishable mix formats. - [PERSONAL] - built from commercial streaming music for personal use. The engine can't fake vocals or your personal history with a song, and shouldn't try.
Global rules (all playlists): - Volume: background music means background - just above audibility for work playlists. Salience scales distraction (§1.3). - Familiarity: work playlists should be familiar (novelty captures attention, §1.2); emotional and creative playlists can afford novelty. - Don't mix jobs. The moment a focus playlist becomes emotionally interesting, it has failed at its job.
1. Deep Work - Verbal [ENGINE] - writing, reading, hard debugging
The strictest spec. Verbal working memory must be protected: unpredictable sound and lyrics disrupt it even when ignored (Salamé & Baddeley 1982; Perham & Currie 2014; §1.2, §2.1).
- No lyrics, no vocal samples, ever
- High self-similarity: slow harmonic drift, no dramatic melodic contour
- Attack times ≥ 150 ms (no percussive transients)
- Narrow dynamic range; no section that makes you look up
- Honest alternative: silence or broadband noise may beat it for you - test (§3.5)
# recipe parameters
tempo_bpm: null # unpulsed; motion from slow LFO drift only
mode: ionian_or_lydian # consonant, low-tension
attack_floor_ms: 150
dynamic_range_max_db: 6
melodic_salience: minimal # no foreground melody
texture: 2-3 sustained layers (pad, sub drone, sparse shimmer)
lufs_target: -23
[PERSONAL] equivalents / search terms: "ambient drone," "textural ambient," Stars of the Lid, Eluvium, Brian Eno's ambient series, Max Richter's quieter work, "deep focus instrumental." Avoid "epic study music" - cinematic dynamics violate the spec.
2. Deep Work - Analytical [ENGINE] - routine coding, math, spreadsheets
Lower verbal load tolerates a steady pulse; the pulse aids time-on-task feel. Evidence status: extrapolated from the task-complexity findings (Gonzalez & Aiello 2019, JEP: Applied); there is no strong coding-specific literature (§2.2).
- Steady 95-115 BPM pulse, soft-attack percussion only
- Instrumental, repetitive 8/16-bar cycles, gradual filter evolution
- Switch to Playlist 1 (or silence) when reading unfamiliar code
tempo_bpm: 95-115
mode: dorian_or_aeolian
attack_floor_ms: 30 # soft ticks allowed, no sharp snares
dynamic_range_max_db: 8
texture: pulse + bass + pad, one slowly-evolving voice
section_change_every_bars: 32 # slow, predictable evolution
lufs_target: -20
[PERSONAL] equivalents: minimal techno (Kompakt label), dub techno, Tycho, Bonobo instrumentals, "minimal techno focus," "dub techno mix."
3. Admin / Shallow Work [PERSONAL] - email, chores, expense reports
The one work context where stimulating music with lyrics is evidence-aligned: salient music helps simple, boring tasks (Gonzalez & Aiello 2019; Kämpfe et al. 2011; §2.3).
- Upbeat, familiar favorites; lyrics welcome
- Choose energy just above the task's boredom level
- Search terms: your existing favorites; "feel good," decade playlists you know cold.
4. Creative / Diffuse Thinking [PERSONAL, ENGINE-assisted]
Mood scaffolding around ideation, not during verbal drafting. Evidence status: mixed; background music has even impaired verbal insight problem-solving (Threadgold et al. 2019, Applied Cognitive Psychology; §2.4).
- Moderately novel instrumental music between thinking bouts; anything goes on breaks
- During actual verbal ideation: drop to Playlist 1 rules or silence
- Search terms: "modern classical," "fourth world," "jazz ambient," Jon Hassell, Alice Coltrane, Floating Points.
5. Downshift - Stress Reduction [ENGINE]
The strongest clinical literature: slow, predictable, low-dynamic music reduces physiological and psychological stress (de Witte et al. 2020 meta-analyses, Health Psychology Review; §2.5).
- ~60-80 BPM felt motion, descending energy arc across 20-30 min
- Warm consonance, no surprises, generous reverb tails
tempo_bpm: 60-80 # felt as slow swells, not a beat
mode: ionian
attack_floor_ms: 300
dynamic_range_max_db: 5
arc: descending # spectral centroid + density fall over the render
duration_default_min: 25
lufs_target: -24
[PERSONAL] equivalents: "slow ambient," Hammock, Ólafur Arnalds' quiet pieces, Hiroshi Yoshimura, "60 bpm relaxation instrumental."
6. Emotional Processing [PERSONAL]
Deliberate, time-boxed listening - never background. Sad music reliably provides consolation and emotion regulation for many listeners, moderated by empathy and rumination tendency (Taruffi & Koelsch 2014, PLOS ONE; §2.6).
- Your music, your lyrics, your history; nostalgia does most of the work
- 20-40 minute sessions with a defined end; if you tend to ruminate, pair with journaling or a walk, and stop if mood sinks instead of settles
- No search terms needed - you already know these songs.
- Anger variant: when furious, match the arousal - your own aggressive/high-energy music - rather than forcing calm; shift toward Downshift only after the edge drops (the music-therapy "iso principle"; Sharman & Dingle 2015, small n=39 study, moderate evidence; §2.10).
7. Walk / Recover [PERSONAL]
The best-supported positive effect in the whole literature: better affect, performance, and lower perceived exertion across 139 studies (Terry, Karageorghis et al. 2020 meta-analysis, Psychological Bulletin; §2.7).
- Fast (115-140 BPM), personally motivational, familiar vocal music
- Save absolute favorites for the hardest part of the walk/workout
- Search terms: "running 120-140 bpm," your high-energy favorites.
8. Sleep Wind-Down [ENGINE]
Routine + relaxation, honestly framed: music improves subjective sleep quality in insomnia with moderate-certainty evidence (Jespersen et al. 2022 Cochrane review; §2.8). Part of a consistent pre-bed sequence, not an all-night stream.
- 30-45 min, played at the same point in the wind-down every night, low volume
- Slowest attack times in the system; energy arc falls to near-silence
- No claims about sleep stages - the Cochrane-supported outcome is subjective sleep quality
tempo_bpm: 50-65 # barely-felt motion
mode: ionian_low_register
attack_floor_ms: 500
dynamic_range_max_db: 4
arc: descending_to_silence
duration_default_min: 40
lufs_target: -28 # markedly quiet; player volume low too
[PERSONAL] equivalents: "sleep ambient no melody," Green-House, Grouper's quieter side, "drone sleep music" (skip anything labeled with Hz claims - see §3.2).
9. Mood Lift [PERSONAL]
Deliberate short-term mood raising. The evidence needs both halves: upbeat music and the intention to feel better; passive play didn't move mood (Ferguson & Sheldon 2013, two experiments; moderate evidence for lasting effects; §2.9).
- 15-25 min of genuinely upbeat music you love; use it on purpose ("I'm putting this on to shift gears"), then get on with the day - don't keep polling your mood
- Major-key, energetic, familiar; lyrics fine; great before social things or after a slump
- Search terms: your own feel-good history first; "good mood classics," upbeat playlists in genres you already love.
10. Intimacy [PERSONAL]
Honest evidence status: thin and this doc says so. One lab-demonstrated mechanism, excitation transfer (Marin et al. 2017, PLOS ONE), plus conditioning and self-consciousness masking; no validated genre/tempo prescription and absolutely no "aphrodisiac frequency" (§2.11).
- Shared history beats acoustics: music tied to your relationship outperforms any generic "sensual" playlist on the conditioning mechanism
- Otherwise: moderate arousal without attention capture - smooth timbres, warm bass, steady slow-to-mid grooves, no jarring transitions, no comedy shuffles; vocals fine, skip anything lyrically distracting or associated with other contexts
- Long enough not to think about it (60+ min), volume low; gapless > shuffle
- Search terms: "slow jams," "bedroom R&B," trip-hop, "late night soul" - as starting points for taste, not prescriptions
- Stays personal-use and off-channel: publishing this under CognitionFM would dilute the focus/recovery brand, and generative synthesis is weakest exactly where this playlist lives (vocals, groove, familiarity).
Quick-reference
| State | Playlist | Vocals | Pulse | The one rule |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Writing/reading | 1 Verbal | never | none | protect verbal memory |
| Routine coding | 2 Analytical | never | steady | predictability |
| Email/chores | 3 Admin | yes | any | raise arousal |
| Ideation | 4 Creative | breaks only | loose | mood, not soundtrack |
| Stressed | 5 Downshift | no | slow swells | descend |
| Heavy day | 6 Processing | yes | any | time-boxed, on purpose |
| Walking | 7 Walk | yes | fast | motivation is legal here |
| Pre-bed | 8 Sleep | never | minimal | same time, every night |
| Slumped | 9 Mood Lift | yes | upbeat | intention + music, then move on |
| Intimate | 10 Intimacy | yes | slow groove | shared history beats acoustics |