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I don't know if there's a way to straight up convert the files to a MP3 player compatible file.
I've got two options for you:
1: Turn the in-game music volume down, and turn up the volume of the binaural beats. You'll need a 3rd party application to record the audio from the game, which you should be able to save as any format you want.
2: Ask PopCap via email and see if they have the audio files they used for the binaural beats. It may be a long shot, but it's less complicated than the first option.
Found a programm that createv .wav-files from the original beats, which obviously aren't as small as mp3, but did fine anyway ;)