The Brain and Music

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How the Brain Processes Music

August 29th, 2012 · music and the brain

I’ve heard people say for several decades now, that the brain is the last unexplored frontier.   I find that extremely exciting because I know how powerful music is and I believe that the more we understand about how music affects us, through the brain, then the better we can help humans to heal from a wide variety of physical and mental illnesses, and also help humans to move toward a greater realization of their full potential! According to a 1997 article in the Harvard Gazette,

      “Your inner ear contains a spiral sheet that the sounds of music pluck like a guitar string. This plucking triggers the firing of brain cells that make up the hearing parts of your brain. At the highest station, the auditory cortex, just above your ears, these firing cells generate the conscious experience of music. Different patterns of firing excite other ensembles of cells, and these associate the sound of music with feelings, thoughts, and past experiences.

That’s a sketch of how the brain listens to music — just a short ditty to outline the complex symphony of activity that governs our perception of everything from Bach to U2. It’s also a lot more than was known until recently.

“We know much more about how we see than how we hear,” says Mark Tramo, assistant professor of neurology at the Medical School, Ph.D. student, and published songwriter. “What happens in hearing is harder to understand intuitively.”

Sound transmitted to the inner ear is broken down according to the spectrum of frequencies that make up sounds. This orderly arrangement of low to higher frequencies is mapped onto the brain much like the way low to high notes are mapped on a piano keyboard. However, not much is known about how the pieces are put back together when we recognize melodies, words, or the scolding sound of someone’s voice.

Beyond the working of specific bunches of brain cells, humans may come into the world with a predisposition to enjoy singing and music, just as language capacities seem to be prewired into our heads. Culture and experience also play a major role in how we perceive music. Finally, there’s evidence that young children who study music become better problem-solvers than those without such training.”

William J. Cromie is th author of the above.

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Learning to play music benefits the brain: neuroplasticity

August 1st, 2012 · music and the brain

(NaturalNews) Northwestern University scientists have pulled together a review of research into what music — specifically, learning to play music — does to humans. The result shows music training does far more than allow us to entertain ourselves and others by playing an instrument or singing. Instead, it actually changes our brains.

The paper, just published in Nature Reviews Neuroscience, is a compilation of research findings from scientists all over the world who used all kinds of research methods. The bottom line to all these studies: musical training has a profound impact on other skills including speech and language, memory and attention, and even the ability to convey emotions vocally.

So what is it that musical training does? According to the Northwestern scientists, the findings strongly indicate it adds new neural connections — and that primes the brain for other forms of human communication.

In fact, actively working with musical sounds enhances neuroplasticity, the brain’s ability to adapt and change. “A musician’s brain selectively enhances information-bearing elements in sound. In a beautiful interrelationship between sensory and cognitive processes, the nervous system makes associations between complex sounds and what they mean,” Nina Kraus, lead author of the Nature paper and director of Northwestern’s Auditory Neuroscience Laboratory, explained in a statement to the media. “The efficient sound-to-meaning connections are important not only for music but for other aspects of communication.”

For example, researchers have found that musicians are better than non-musicians in learning to incorporate sound patterns for a new language into words. Their brains also appear to be primed to comprehend speech in a noisy background.

What’s more, children who have had music lessons tend to have a larger vocabulary and better reading ability than youngsters who haven’t had any musical training. And children with learning disabilities, who often have a hard time focusing when there’s a lot of background noise, may be especially helped by music lessons. “Music training seems to strengthen the same neural processes that often are deficient in individuals with developmental dyslexia or who have difficulty hearing speech in noise,” Dr. Kraus stated.

The Northwestern researchers concluded their findings make a case for including music in school curriculums. “The effect of music training suggests that, akin to physical exercise and its impact on body fitness, music is a resource that tones the brain for auditory fitness and thus requires society to re-examine the role of music in shaping individual development,” they wrote.

In addition to musical training, listening to music has also been shown to have some remarkable beneficial effects on the body. For example, as NaturalNews has previously reported, Tel Aviv University scientists found that premature infants exposed to thirty minutes of Mozart’s music daily grew far more rapidly than premature babies not exposed to classical music (http://www.naturalnews.com/028011_m…) and researchers at the University of Florence in Italy documented that listening to classical, Celtic or Indian (raga) music once a day for four weeks significantly reduced the blood pressure in people suffering from hypertension.  Friday, July 30, 2010 by: S. L. Baker, features writer

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New study shows: Three basic emotions evoked by Western music affect people everywhere, regardless of culture or habits,

June 25th, 2012 · how the brain works, music and the brain

Three basic emotions evoked by Western music affect people everywhere, regardless of culture or habits, a new study shows.

People in Africa who’ve never listened to a radio can still pick up on happy, sad, and fearful emotions in Western music, researchers say in the journal Current Biology.

These emotions in music can be universally recognized, says Thomas Fritz of the Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences. “These findings could explain why Western music has been so successful in global music distribution, even in music cultures that do not as strongly emphasize the role of emotional expression in their music,” Fritz says in a news release.

In some musical traditions, music is appreciated for qualities other than emotions, such as group coordination rituals, the researchers say.

Fritz and colleagues, including Stefan Koelsch of the University of Sussex, set out to determine whether the emotional aspects of Western music could be appreciated by people who had no prior knowledge of it.

They recruited members of the Mafa, one of about 250 ethnic groups in Cameroon, who were unfamiliar with Western music. The scientists concluded, after exposing the Mafa people to Western music, that the African listeners could pick up on emotional expressions of happiness, sadness, and fear more often than would have been expected by chance.

The researchers found that both Western and African listeners enjoyed original Western or Mafa music more, finding it more pleasant than music that had been manipulated, such as original music played with another version of a different pitch.

“Both Mafa and Western listeners showed an ability to recognize the three basic emotional expressions tested in this study (happy, sad, and scared/fearful) from Western music above chance level,” the researchers say. “This indicates that these emotional expressions conveyed by the Western musical excerpts can be universally recognized, similar to the largely universal recognition of human emotional facial expression.”

Westerners and Mafas alike were more likely to classify pieces with higher tempos as happy and songs with lower tempos as fearful or scared, the researchers say.

The mode of the music pieces was also significant. “Both Westerners and Mafas classified the majority of major pieces as happy, the majority of pieces with indefinite mode as sad, and most of the pieces in minor as scared,” the researchers write. “The universal capacity to identify emotional expressions in Western music is presumably at least partly due to the universal capability to recognize nonverbal patterns of emotional expressiveness.”

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WebMD Health News

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Does music actually change your brain? Scientists think so!

June 1st, 2012 · how the brain works, music and the brain

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Music: It’s in your head, changing your brain
By Elizabeth Landau , CNN
updated 9:55 AM EDT, Mon May 28, 2012
CNN.com

Bassist Victor Wooten says you don’t need to start with the rules of music in order to play an instrument.

(CNN) — Michael Jackson was on to something when he sang that “A-B-C” is “simple as ‘Do Re Mi.'” Music helps kids remember basic facts such as the order of letters in the alphabet, partly because songs tap into fundamental systems in our brains that are sensitive to melody and beat.

That’s not all: when you play music, you are exercising your brain in a unique way.

“I think there’s enough evidence to say that musical experience, musical exposure, musical training, all of those things change your brain,” says Dr. Charles Limb, associate professor of otolaryngology and head and neck surgery at Johns Hopkins University. “It allows you to think in a way that you used to not think, and it also trains a lot of other cognitive facilities that have nothing to do with music.”

The connection between music and the brain is the subject of a symposium at the Association for Psychological Science conference in Chicago this weekend, featuring prominent scientists and Grammy-winning bassist Victor Wooten. They will discuss the remarkable ways our brains enable us to appreciate, remember and play music, and how we can harness those abilities in new ways.

There are more facets to the mind-music connection than there are notes in a major scale, but it’s fascinating to zoom in on a few to see the extraordinary affects music can have on your brain.

Making music sound ‘better’

Ear worms

Whether it’s “Somewhere Over the Rainbow” or “Somebody That I Used to Know,” or even “Bad Romance” or “Bohemian Rhapsody,” it’s easy to get part of a song stuck in your head, perhaps even a part that you don’t particularly like. It plays over and over on repeat, as if the “loop” button got stuck on your music player.

Scientists think of these annoying sound segments as “ear worms.” They don’t yet know much about why they happen, but research is making headway on what’s going on.

The songs that get stuck in people’s heads tend to be melodically and rhythmically simple, says Daniel Levitin, a psychologist who studies the neuroscience of music at McGill University in Montreal, Quebec. It’s usually just a segment of the song, not the entire thing from beginning to end. A common method of getting rid of an ear worm is to listen to a different song — except, of course, that song might plant itself in your thoughts for awhile.

“What we think is going on is that the neural circuits get stuck in a repeating loop and they play this thing over and over again,” Levitin said.

In rare cases, ear worms can actually be detrimental to people’s everyday functioning, Levitin said. There are people who can’t work, sleep or concentrate because of songs that won’t leave their heads. They may even need to take the same anti-anxiety medications given to people with obsessive-compulsive disorder, drugs that relax the neural circuits that are stuck in an infinite loop.

How we evolved to remember music

Given how easily song snippets get stuck in our heads, music must be linked to some sort of evolutionary adaptation that helped our ancestors.

Bone flutes have been dated to about 40,000 to 80,000 years ago, so people were at least playing music. Experts assume that people were probably singing before they went to the trouble of fashioning this instrument, Levitin said. In Judaism, the Torah was set to music as a way to remember it before it was written down.

“The structures that respond to music in the brain evolved earlier than the structures that respond to language,” Levitin said.

Levitin points out that many of our ancestors, before there was writing, used music to help them remember things, such as how to prepare foods or the way to get to a water source. These procedural tasks would have been easier to remember as songs. Today, we still use songs to teach children things in school, like the 50 states.

What about remembering how to play music?

When you sit down at the piano and learn how to play a song, your brain has to execute what’s known as a “motor-action plan.” It means that a sequence of events must unfold in a particular order, your fingers must hit a precise pattern of notes in order. And you rehearse those motor movements over and over, strengthening the neural circuits the more you practice.

But musicians who memorize how to play music often find they can’t just begin a remembered piece at any point in the song. The brain has a certain number of entry nodes in the motor-action plan, so you can only access the information from particular points in the song.

“Even though it feels like it’s in your fingers, it’s not,” Levitin said. “It’s in the finger representation in your head.”

Music and pleasure

Music is strongly associated with the brain’s reward system. It’s the part of the brain that tells us if things are valuable, or important or relevant to survival, said Robert Zatorre, professor of neurology and neurosurgery at Montreal Neurological Institute.

One brain structure in particular, called the striatum, releases a chemical called dopamine in response to pleasure-related stimuli. Imaging of the brain can reveal this process is similar to what happens in your brain in response to food or sex.

But unlike those activities, music doesn’t have a direct biological survival value. “It’s not obvious that it should engage that same system,” Zatorre said.

Musicians can’t see inside their own brains, but they’re aware of moments of tension and release in pieces, and that’s what arrangers of music do.

Zatorre and colleagues did an experiment where they used whatever music participants said gave them pleasure to examine this dopamine release. They excluded music with words in order to focus on the music itself rather than lyrics — the melodic structure, for example.

At the point in a piece of music when people experience peak pleasure, part of the brain called the ventral striatum releases dopamine. But here’s something even more interesting: Dopamine is released from a different brain area (the dorsal striatum) about 10 to 15 seconds before the moment of peak pleasure.

Why would we have this reaction before the most pleasurable part of the piece of music? The brain likes to investigate its environment and figure out what’s coming next, Zatorre explains.

“As you’re anticipating a moment of pleasure, you’re making predictions about what you’re hearing and what you’re about to hear,” he said. “Part of the pleasure we derive from it is being able to make predictions.”

So if you’re getting such a strong dopamine rush from music — it could even be comparable to methamphetamines, Zatorre said — why not make drug addicts listen to music? It’s not quite that simple.

Neuroscientists believe there’s basically one pleasure mechanism, and music is one route into it. Drugs are another. But different stimuli have different properties. And it’s no easier to tell someone to replace drugs with music than to suggest eating instead of having sex — these are all pleasurable activities with important differences.

Rocking to the beat

Did you know that monkeys can’t tap their feet to songs, or recognize beats?

It appears that humans are the only primates who move to the beat of music. Aniruddh Patel at the Neurosciences Institute in San Diego, California, speculates that this is because our brains are organized in a different way than our close species relatives. Grooving to a beat may be related to the fact that no other primates can mimic complex sounds.

Snowball the cockatoo can dance to song beats, whereas monkeys cannot, says Aniruddh Patel.

Snowball the cockatoo can dance to song beats, whereas monkeys cannot, says Aniruddh Patel.

Curiously, some birds can mimic what they hear and move to beats. Patel’s research with a cockatoo suggests the beat responses may have originated as a byproduct of vocal mimicry, but also play a role in social bonding, Patel said. Armies train by marching to a beat, for instance. Group dancing is a social activity. There also are studies showing that when people move together to a beat, they’re more likely to cooperate with each other in nonmusical tasks than if they’re not in synch.

“Some people have theorized that that was the original function of this behavior in evolution: It was a way of bonding people emotionally together in groups, through shared movement and shared experience,” Patel said.

Another exciting arena of research: Music with a beat seems to help people with motor disorders such as Parkinson’s disease walk better than in the absence of music — patients actually synchronize their movements to a beat, Patel said.

“That’s a very powerful circuit in the brain,” he said. “It can actually help people that have these serious neurological diseases.”

There’s also some evidence to suggest that music can help Alzheimer’s patients remember things better, and that learning new skills such as musical instruments might even stave off dementia.

There still needs to be more research in these areas to confirm, but Limb is hopeful about the prospect of musical engagement as a way to prevent, or at least delay, dementia.

“That’s a pretty amazing thing that, from sound, you can stimulate the entire brain,” Limb said. “If you think about dementia as the opposite trend, of the brain atrophying, I think there’s a lot of basis to it.”

Music and emotions

You may associate particular songs with events in your life — Green Day’s “Good Riddance (Time of Your Life)” might remind you of your graduation day, if you had a graduation in the 1990s or 2000s, for example.

Despite variation in any given person’s life experience, studies have shown that music listeners largely agree with one another when it comes to the emotions presented in a song. This may be independent of lyrics; musical sounds themselves may carry emotional meaning, writes Cornell University psychologist Carol Krumhansl in Current Directions in Psychological Science.

Educational shows such as “Sesame Street” have been tapping into the power of music to help youngsters remember things for decades. Even babies have been shown to be sensitive to beats and can recognize a piece of music that they’ve already heard.

Advertisers exploit music in many commercials to make you excited about products. As a result, you may associate songs with particular cars, for instance.

Here’s one way you might not already be using music: Making a deliberate effort to use music to alter mood. Listen to something that makes you energetic at the beginning of the day, and listen to a soothing song after an argument, Levitin says.

Music as a language

Victor Wooten of Béla Fleck and the Flecktones isn’t a scientist, but he has thought a lot about the process of learning to play music. For him, introducing a child to music shouldn’t be different from the way a child begins speaking.

“I just approach music as a language, because it is,” Wooten said. “It serves the same purpose. It’s a form of expression. A way for me to express myself, convey feelings, and sometimes it actually works better than a written or verbal language.”

Traditionally, a child learns to play music by being taught how an instrument works, and learning to play easy pieces that they practice over and over. They might also play music with other beginners. All the rules come first — notes, chords, notation — before they play.

But with language, young children never know that they’re beginners, Wooten said. No one makes them feel bad when they say a word incorrectly, and they’re not told to practice that word dozens of times. Why should it be different with music?

“If you think about trying to teach a toddler how to read, and the alphabet, and all that stuff, before they can speak, we’d realize how silly that really is,” Wooten said. “Kids most of the time quit, because they didn’t come there to learn that. They came to learn to play.”

He remembers learning to play music in an immersive way, rather than in a formulaic sequence of lessons. When he was born, his four older brothers were already playing music and knew they needed a bass player to complete the band. “My brothers never said, ‘This is what you’re going to do,'” he said.

Wooten took this philosophy and created summer camps to get kids excited about music in a more natural way.

“It’s rare that I ever meet a musician who doesn’t agree that music is a language. But it’s very rare to meet a musician that really treats it like one.”

There you have it: Music that gets stuck in your head can be annoying, but it also serves a multitude of other purposes that benefit you. If you treat it like a language, as Wooten suggests, you might learn new skills and reap some of the brain health benefits that neurologists are exploring.

It’s more complicated than “A, B, C,” but that’s how amazing the mind can be.

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Effects of Music on the Brain

March 7th, 2012 · Uncategorized

 

It has long been obvious that music affects people profoundly.  What is new, though, is that research is being conducted to determine the effects of music on the brain.  Through this research much has been learned about the effects of music on brain function.
It has been shown over and over again that one of the strongest effects of music on the brain is in the area of memory.  Students of foreign languages were shown to be able to learn hundreds of vocabulary items in one day when listening to appropriate music.  What is more, they remembered the words over time at a level of 92% retention.  This feat was accomplished with the use of baroque classical music.  The tempo was the most successful at a steady rate of 60 beats per minute.  At this tempo, people seemed to remember the most.  This was one of the interesting effects of music on the brain.

Music and Testing

In one study, data was analyzed as to the benefits of listening to music of different genres (classical or jazz) and tempos.  Results did not differ that much from one type of music to the next. However, when the tempo was changed from learning time to testing time, the test results suffered.  It seems that people recall information much better when music is played at the same speed as when they originally learned it.

There was a study conducted to test the effects of music on the brains of college students.  This study looked at the effects of listening to Mozart before taking an IQ test.  Among three groups, one listening to relaxation tapes and one listening to nothing, the group listening to Mozart had the highest average score.

Music and Brain Disease

Alzheimer’s patients have also been shown to benefit mentally from listening to music. Listening to music triggered certain memories to be recalled that had been otherwise forgotten.  Parkinson’s patients also benefitted from the effects of music on the brain.  Motor skills seemed to improve when some patients were better able to walk while music was being played.

Negative Effects

Not all the effects of music on the brain are positive however.  Some types of music can cause the brain to lose it’s symmetry between it’s right and left halves, or hemispheres.  We’ve all experienced this, when trying to concentrate on a task while loud or otherwise disruptive music is being played.  Ask any teacher and they’ll tell you that this can lead to learning disabilities and behavior disruptions in children. It can likewise generate diminished work capabilities in adults.

The types of music that cause these effects on the brain are mostly agressive forms of music such as heavy rock or rap.  The specific type of beat may be at fault.  It could also be attributed to the fact that too much repetition leads to feelings of anger and hostility.

To achieve positive effects of music on the brain, music must have certain attributes.  It needs to be fairly complex to involve more of the brain in the activity and keep the person interested.  New and different music is another factor that keeps the brain active and not bored.

http://www.brainhealthandpuzzles.com/effects_music_brain.html

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