EveryEvent Bangkok

Ver Todos los Events

Find every event in Bangkok

events

Concerts & Live Music
Festivals
Sports & Recreation
Food & Drink
Arts & Culture
Community
Family & Kids
Nightlife
Comedy
Theater
Destinos Populares
BaliSedonaLos AngelesCosta RicaNew YorkSan FranciscoAustinMiamiJoshua TreeTulum
Ver Todas las CategoríasVer Todos los Destinos

Explorar Todas las Características

Herramientas poderosas para hacer crecer tus eventos

Características de la Plataforma

Precios Dinámicos Inteligentes
Categorías de Entradas
Asientos Asignados
Recuperación de Carritos
Recuperación de Visitantes
Donaciones y Escala Móvil
Motor de Afiliados
Escáner de Entradas
Códigos de Cupón
Preguntas Personalizadas
Compartir Entradas
Ventas Adicionales
Análisis e Informes
Secuencias de Email
Lista de Espera / Notificar / Recordar
Explorar
Discovery HubArtists & PerformersVenuesKnowledge Base
Ver Todas las CaracterísticasSobre Nosotros
PreciosBlog
Ver Todos los Eventos

events

Concerts & Live MusicFestivalsSports & RecreationFood & DrinkArts & CultureCommunityFamily & KidsNightlife

Destinos Populares

BaliSedonaLos AngelesCosta RicaNew YorkSan Francisco

Explorar

Discovery HubArtists & PerformersVenuesKnowledge Base

Características de la Plataforma

Precios Dinámicos InteligentesCategorías de EntradasAsientos AsignadosRecuperación de CarritosRecuperación de VisitantesDonaciones y Escala MóvilMotor de AfiliadosEscáner de EntradasCódigos de CupónPreguntas PersonalizadasCompartir EntradasVentas AdicionalesAnálisis e InformesSecuencias de EmailLista de Espera / Notificar / Recordar
Ver Todas las CaracterísticasSobre Nosotros
PreciosBlog
Iniciar sesiónRegistrarseOrganizadores de Eventos
  • Browse All Events
  • Concerts & Live Music
  • Festivals
  • Sports & Recreation
  • Food & Drink
  • Arts & Culture
  • Community
  • Family & Kids
  • Nightlife
  • Todas las Categorías →
  • All Destinations →
  • For Promoters
  • For Artists
  • For Venues
  • For Festivals
  • For Event Spaces
  • For Nonprofits
  • For Bloggers
  • For Speakers
  • Brand Ambassador
  • Case Studies
  • Red de +350K Compradores
  • Recuperación de Carritos
  • Precios Dinámicos Inteligentes
  • Categorías de Entradas
  • Eventos Recurrentes
  • Asientos Asignados
  • Motor de Afiliados
  • Lista de Espera / Notificar
  • Escáner de Entradas
  • Widget Embebido
  • Todas las Características →
  • Acerca de
  • Blog
  • Glosario
  • Inspiration
  • Centro de Ayuda
  • Contacto
  • Documentación API
  • Recursos de Marca
  • Carreras
  • Prensa
  • Términos de Servicio
  • Política de Privacidad

Events

  • Browse All Events
  • Concerts & Live Music
  • Festivals
  • Sports & Recreation
  • Food & Drink
  • Arts & Culture
  • Community
  • Family & Kids
  • Nightlife
  • Todas las Categorías →

Getaways

  • All Destinations →

For Organizers

  • For Promoters
  • For Artists
  • For Venues
  • For Festivals
  • For Event Spaces
  • For Nonprofits
  • For Bloggers
  • For Speakers
  • Brand Ambassador
  • Case Studies

Características

  • Red de +350K Compradores
  • Recuperación de Carritos
  • Precios Dinámicos Inteligentes
  • Categorías de Entradas
  • Eventos Recurrentes
  • Asientos Asignados
  • Motor de Afiliados
  • Lista de Espera / Notificar
  • Escáner de Entradas
  • Widget Embebido
  • Todas las Características →

Empresa

  • Acerca de
  • Blog
  • Glosario
  • Inspiration
  • Centro de Ayuda
  • Contacto
  • Documentación API
  • Recursos de Marca
  • Carreras
  • Prensa
  • Términos de Servicio
  • Política de Privacidad
EveryEvent
© 2026 EveryEvent Bangkok. Todos los derechos reservados.
Glossary›Physiological Sigh

Glossary

Physiological Sigh

A breathing pattern featuring two consecutive inhales followed by a long exhale, used to rapidly calm the nervous system and reduce stress in real-time.

What is Physiological Sigh?

The physiological sigh is a specific breathing pattern characterized by a double inhalation through the nose, followed by a long, extended exhalation through the mouth. This technique can function both as an involuntary reflex our bodies use to reset the nervous system and as a deliberate practice to rapidly reduce stress and anxiety. The double inhale-exhale sequence leverages the body’s natural respiratory mechanics to shift the autonomic nervous system from sympathetic activation (fight-or-flight) to parasympathetic dominance (rest-and-digest), producing measurable calming effects within seconds.

Unlike many stress-reduction methods that require stepping away from demanding situations, the physiological sigh functions as an “in-the-moment” intervention—a brief neurophysiological reset that can be deployed during stressful encounters without interrupting ongoing activity. The pattern occurs spontaneously throughout daily life: after crying, before sleep, and in response to elevated carbon dioxide levels in the bloodstream.

Origins & Lineage

The “physiological sigh” as a distinct breathing pattern was first identified by scientists in the 1930s, who recognized it as a vital, automatic reflex for maintaining lung function. Early researchers observed this breathing pattern emerging spontaneously in claustrophobic environments or deep sleep as an involuntary response to stress or the need to calm down.

In 2016, neuroscientists Jack Feldman at UCLA and Mark Krasnow at Stanford pinpointed the specific clusters of neurons in the brainstem responsible for generating this life-sustaining sigh. These researchers identified the pre-Bötzinger complex as the neurological origin of sighing behavior, establishing the mechanistic basis for how sighs regulate respiratory stability and brain state changes.

The technique gained widespread attention in the 2020s when neuroscientist Dr. Andrew Huberman popularized its use for conscious stress control. Huberman, an associate professor of neurobiology at Stanford University School of Medicine, incorporated findings from respiratory neuroscience into practical protocols accessible to general audiences through his podcast and educational materials. A 2023 study from Stanford University, published in Cell Reports Medicine, found that just five minutes of daily “cyclic sighing” was more effective at improving mood and reducing physiological arousal than mindfulness meditation, providing empirical validation for the technique’s stress-reduction claims.

How It’s Practiced

The physiological sigh follows a three-step sequence:

  1. First inhale: Take a deep breath in through the nose, filling the lungs with air and allowing the diaphragm to expand fully.
  2. Second inhale: Without exhaling, take a second, shorter inhale through the nose to maximally inflate the lungs.
  3. Extended exhale: Release all the air through the mouth in a long, slow exhalation.

The entire cycle typically takes 6–10 seconds. For acute stress relief, one to three repetitions often suffice. For sustained benefits, practitioners may perform the pattern for five minutes, which constitutes “cyclic sighing” protocols used in research settings.

The double-inhale mechanism serves a specific physiological purpose: the double inhale pops open tiny air sacs in the lungs (alveoli) that may have collapsed during shallow, stressed breathing. This re-expansion optimizes lung surface area for gas exchange, facilitating efficient carbon dioxide removal. The extended exhale activates the vagus nerve, which triggers parasympathetic nervous system responses including decreased heart rate and blood pressure.

Practitioners report sensations of immediate relief, reduced mental agitation, and restored breathing variability after performing the sequence. The technique requires no equipment, training, or particular setting, making it accessible in contexts ranging from high-stress work environments to clinical therapy sessions.

Physiological Sigh Today

Contemporary seekers encounter the physiological sigh through multiple channels. Neuroscience-informed wellness educators incorporate it into stress management curricula, breathwork facilitators include it in somatic practice repertoires, and therapists trained in dialectical behavior therapy (DBT) and other embodied modalities teach it as a distress tolerance skill. Andrew Huberman’s widely distributed podcast episodes and demonstration videos have made the technique recognizable to millions, contributing to its integration into workplace wellness programs, athletic training protocols, and personal resilience practices.

The technique appears in clinical settings as a non-pharmacological intervention for anxiety, trauma responses, and emotional dysregulation. Mental health professionals value its simplicity and rapid onset—qualities that make it suitable for clients experiencing acute distress or those seeking accessible self-regulation tools. Research continues to explore applications in sleep transitions, post-traumatic stress management, and performance optimization contexts.

Online meditation platforms, breathwork apps, and somatic therapy trainings now routinely include physiological sighing in their teaching libraries. The practice has migrated from neuroscience laboratories into yoga studios, corporate mindfulness programs, and integrative medicine clinics, reflecting growing interest in bottom-up (body-to-mind) regulatory strategies grounded in measurable physiology rather than exclusively cognitive interventions.

Common Misconceptions

The physiological sigh is not a meditation practice, though it can complement meditative techniques. It operates through immediate physiological mechanisms rather than through cultivated attention or mental states. Unlike pranayama practices from yogic traditions, which embed within broader philosophical and energetic frameworks, the physiological sigh functions as a discrete nervous system intervention without necessary connection to spiritual context or practice lineages.

Some assume the technique requires extended practice sessions to be effective. Research indicates otherwise: even single cycles produce measurable stress reduction. While five-minute protocols show enhanced cumulative benefits, the mechanism works rapidly—one to three sighs often suffice for acute regulation.

The physiological sigh should not be confused with hyperventilation techniques or breath retention practices. It does not induce altered states, generate euphoric experiences, or dramatically shift consciousness. Its effects are regulatory rather than consciousness-expanding: bringing arousal levels down from hyperactivation toward baseline equilibrium.

It is not a substitute for addressing chronic stress through lifestyle changes, psychological treatment, or social support. The technique provides symptomatic relief and in-the-moment regulation but does not resolve underlying stressors or heal trauma. Practitioners experiencing persistent anxiety or stress-related health conditions should seek comprehensive care rather than relying solely on breathwork interventions.

How to Begin

To begin practicing the physiological sigh, simply perform the three-step sequence described above: double inhale through the nose, extended exhale through the mouth. No prior experience, instruction, or preparation is necessary. The pattern can be explored immediately upon reading this definition.

For those seeking structured guidance, Andrew Huberman’s Huberman Lab podcast (particularly episode #10, “Tools for Managing Stress & Anxiety”) provides detailed explanation of the neuroscience and demonstrates proper execution. The original 2023 research study by Balban, Huberman, and colleagues, published in Cell Reports Medicine, offers protocol specifications for five-minute daily practice.

Integration into existing practices works well: use the physiological sigh before meditation to settle the nervous system, during yoga practice when tension arises, or as preparation for sleep. Therapists trained in somatic approaches, DBT, or polyvagal-informed methods can provide personalized instruction for incorporating the technique into broader emotional regulation skill sets.

The physiological sigh works best when applied preemptively—at the first signs of stress escalation rather than waiting for full activation. Developing awareness of early stress signals (jaw tension, shallow breathing, racing thoughts) creates opportunities for timely intervention. With repeated use, the pattern becomes an accessible neurophysiological tool for navigating daily stressors and maintaining autonomic balance.

Related terms

coherent breathingresonant breathingtactical breathingcircular breathingclarity breathworkmindfulness based stress reduction
All termsDiscover