Why you should be listening to music here:
Music protocols. This is a complete no-brainer, your doctor is completely incompetent if this hasn't already been implemented in their hospital.
1. Exploring a Neuroplasticity Model of Music Therapy
2. Revealed: The Type of Music That Makes You Feel Most Powerful
3. 11 Problems Music Can Solve
4. How playing an instrument benefits your brain - Anita Collins
5. Why does music therapy work? The Science Behind the Music.
6. Musical Training Can Increase Blood Flow in Brain
7. Listening to classical music ameliorates unilateral neglect after stroke
8. Music brings memories back to the brain injured
9. Plasticity in the sensorimotor cortex induced by Music-supported therapy in stroke patients: a TMS study
10. Moderating variables of music training-induced neuroplasticity: a review and discussion
11. Hand-Clapping Songs Improve Motor and Cognitive Skills, Research Shows
The music you like compared to the way you process information:
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/music-says-lot-brain-processes-194238794.html
Confession: I've recently started getting into country music — a genre
of music that used to make me want to change the radio station as fast
as possible.
But as uncharacteristic
as it is for me to delve into that genre, it makes sense for the way I
react to the world around me, according to a recent study published in PLOS ONE.
In the study, researchers found that the types of music you like are linked to the way you process information.
The study was based off the idea that there are two ways people respond to their surroundings:
The first way is called
empathizing, where someone is socially apt and can easily interact with
those around them. The second way, called systemizing, describes a less
sociable way of interaction where the individual interacts with others
based on a pre-set notion of how they think they should act.
For example, when asked by a
friend if their new hair cut looks good, a systemizer would tell the
truth without considering their friend's feelings while an empathyzer
would fudge the truth and saw what they thought would make their friend
feel good. This type of systemizing is more common in men than women, according to a 2005 study.
In fact, this hypothetical
haircut situation is one of the pyschological questions that
psychologists from the University of Cambridge asked about 4,000 study
subjets, who were recruited through a Facebook app.
First, the participants took a survey that asked psychological
questions to determine whether they empathize, systemize, or had a
balance of the two. To figure that out, participants answered questions
like "I always get emotional while watching movies" with strongly
disagree, disagree, agree, or strongly agree.To rule out predispositions to certain types of music, they asked the participants to evaluate 50 songs from 26 genres and subgenres.
They found that empathic people
tended to like mellow, unpretentious or contemporary tunes such as Norah
Jones' "Come away with me" or Jeff Buckley's "Hallelujah."
This kind of music included country and folk songs, which is most
likely where my recent obsession with country music factors in.
The songs could express negative emotions or be a trendy
techno song — the empathizers were into it. But, ask the empathizers to
listen to punk or heavy metal, and their reactions weren't as favorable.
Systemizing people, on the other
hand, tended to like high-energy music that conveyed positive emotions.
Songs with a fair amount of complexity, like a complicated piece of
classical music. People whose answers didn't have a clear distinction
between systemizer or empathizer tended to have a mix of both music
tastes.
Here's a graph of what kind of music empathizers (Type E),
systemizers (Type S) or balanced (Type B) liked. The more positive the
score, the more that group of people liked that particular musical
characteristic. The more negative the score, the more people of certain
groups disliked that musical characteristic.
The mean age of the
people involved in the study were around their mid-twenties, but some
participants were as old as 61. The researchers controlled for gender
and age. Even with gender and age playing a role, the connection between
empathizer/sympathizer type and taste in music was still strong.
Knowing what types of music
people like based on how they process information could be important
information for companies like Spotify and Apple Music. "By knowing an
individual's thinking style, such services might in future be able to
fine tune their music recommendations to an individual," lead researcher
David Greenberg said in a news release.
Interested in seeing if your thinking style matches your taste in music? Here's a quiz that can help you determine whether you empathize, systemize, or do a little of both.
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