
Contemporary research in neuroperception and consciousness studies has increasingly examined non-clinical mechanisms through which auditory input and sensory organization influence perceptual processing. However, many existing approaches remain centered on predefined therapeutic protocols, diagnostic classifications, or symptom-oriented frameworks. The TEAR Method presents a non-inductive, non-clinical neuro-perceptual framework designed to support the development of refined self-perceptual awareness as a means of facilitating emotional organization, conscious self-regulation, and timely engagement with professional support when necessary. Rather than prescribing interpretative or behavioral pathways, the method emphasizes the individual’s capacity to recognize internal perceptual signals, limits, and adaptive responses before the emergence of adverse psychological or functional consequences. The framework is grounded in the Primordial Dimensional Frequential Rotation Theory (PDFRT), which conceptualizes perceptual modulation as an acoustic-dimensional mapping process between structured sound exposure and structured silence intervals. This mapping is investigated as a dynamic interaction between auditory input and perceptual integration, independent of chronological age, diagnostic categorization, or fixed interpretative protocols. The TEAR Method operates as an observational and investigative model that may coexist with established therapeutic or medical interventions when clinically indicated, without replacing them. Its application is oriented toward enhancing self-awareness, perceptual maturity, and conscious decision-making across both normative stress conditions and more complex psycho-behavioral contexts. Observational indicators may include, but are not limited to, variations in attention, autonomic responses, vocal modulation, breathing patterns, and perceptual organization, assessed through qualitative observation or compatible physiological measurements. This work outlines the conceptual and methodological foundations of the TEAR Method as a non-prescriptive research framework, maintaining clear ethical boundaries from clinical practice while contributing to broader investigations in neuroperception, consciousness studies, and sensory integration research.
auditory perception, sound–silence modulation, consciousness studies, perceptual integration
auditory perception, sound–silence modulation, consciousness studies, perceptual integration
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