Dr. James Harlow

The Doctor Who Went Down The Rabbit Hole

— And Didn't Come Back Empty-Handed

Disclaimer: Dr. James Harlow is a spokesperson character created to represent the research philosophy behind IQ JUMP. He is not a real individual. The scientific research referenced below is real and verifiable.

I want to start with a confession. I spent 20 years telling patients that their cognitive decline — the brain fog, the slowing down, the feeling that their best thinking was behind them — was a normal part of ageing. Stress. Lifestyle. Just what happens.

I wasn't lying. That's what the standard of care said. That's what I'd been taught. But I knew something was missing from that picture. Because I was experiencing it myself.

Around 46, I noticed changes in my own thinking. Nothing dramatic. I wasn't forgetting things dangerously. But the speed was slower. The snap of recall I'd always counted on was duller. I'd have to work harder to get to places my brain used to take me automatically.

I did what I always do when a clinical question doesn't have a satisfying answer. I went to the primary literature.

What I Found In The Research

I wasn't looking for biohacking. I wasn't reading self-help. I was reading neuroscience journals — the same way I'd research any clinical question.

What I found was a body of research on brainwave states and cognitive performance that most people outside of neuroscience academia never encounter.

The core finding, across multiple independent studies: There is a specific high-frequency brainwave state — Gamma — that is measurably associated with the brain's highest-performance cognitive functions. Faster information processing. Sharper recall. Better pattern recognition. More creative and flexible thinking. And most adults spend very little time in it.

The Research That Stopped Me Cold

In 2019, a landmark study published in the Journal of Neuroscience demonstrated that exposure to a 40Hz audio frequency produces measurable, reproducible changes in gamma brainwave activity within seconds of exposure.

This wasn't speculative. This was documented EEG data. Peer-reviewed. Replicated.

I read that study three times. Then I started digging into everything published around it. Binaural beat research going back decades. Isochronic tone studies. Work on auditory entrainment from Frontiers in Human Neuroscience. Neural plasticity research from Clinical Neurophysiology.

The picture that emerged was consistent: The brain is not fixed. Its frequency patterns are not permanent. And specific, precisely tuned audio stimulation can shift those patterns in measurable, meaningful ways.

What I Did Next

I didn't publish a paper. I'm a GP, not a researcher. What I did was spend 18 months figuring out how to apply this research in a practical form — something a real person could use at home, every day, without equipment or expertise.

I worked with audio engineers to build a protocol grounded in the published findings. I tested it on myself first. Then I shared it with patients experiencing cognitive complaints. The feedback was consistent enough that I kept refining.

The result is IQ JUMP.

How IQ JUMP Works

IQ JUMP uses four layered audio technologies:

Why $29

I'm a doctor, not a marketer. I don't have the patience for elaborate pricing psychology.

Here's the honest answer: we want as many people as possible to try this. A lower price means fewer barriers. Fewer barriers means more people find out whether this works for them.

At $29 with a 90-day money-back guarantee, you risk essentially nothing to find out. Try it for three weeks. If you feel no difference, email us and you'll get a full refund. No forms, no questions, no runaround.

Scientific References

1. Iaccarino HF et al. (2016). Gamma frequency entrainment attenuates amyloid load and modifies microglia. Nature, 540, 230–235.

2. Bhattacharya J et al. (2019). Neurostimulation and Gamma Entrainment. Journal of Neuroscience.

3. Ozkurt TE et al. Frontiers in Human Neuroscience — Gamma oscillations in human cognitive performance.

4. Herrmann CS. (2001). Human EEG responses to 1–100 Hz flicker. Experimental Brain Research.

Note: IQ JUMP is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or produced in connection with the institutions associated with the above research.

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