The Brain and Music

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Music, the Brain, and Memory

January 17th, 2007 · how the brain works, music and the brain

 

I have been studying the use of music with dementia and Alzheimer’s patients for many years, but tonight I want to share with you some exciting information about music and memory for all of us! The following is from http://www.cerebromente.org.br/n15/mente/musica.html<

“The power of music to affect memory is quite intriguing. Mozart’s music and baroque music, with a 60 beats per minute beat pattern, activate the left and right brain. The simultaneous left and right brain action maximizes learning and retention of information. The information being studied activates the left brain while the music activates the right brain. Also, activities which engage both sides of the brain at the same time, such as playing an instrument or singing, causes the brain to be more capable of processing information.”

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Brain Comes Alive to Sound of Music

January 7th, 2007 · Uncategorized

Brain Comes Alive to Sound of Music – Finding offers hope for variety of cures Los Angeles Times, November 11, 1998

The music that makes the foot tap, the fingers snap and the pulse quicken stirs the brain at is most fundamental levels, suggesting that scientists one day may be able to retun damaged minds by exploiting rhythm, harmony and melody, according to new research presented Sunday (November 1998).
Exploring the neurobiology of music, researchers discovered direct evidence that music stimulates specific regions of the brain responsible for memory, motor control, timing and language. For the first time, researchers also have located specific areas of mental activity linked to emotional responses to music. . . .
The latest findings, presented at a meeting of the Society for Neuroscience in Los Angeles, underscore how music–as an almost universal language of mood, emotion and desire–orchestrates a wide variety of neural systems to cast its evocative spell. “Undeniably, there is a biology of music,” said Harvard University Medical School neurobiologist Mark Jude Tramo. “There is no question that there is specialization within the human brain for the processing of music. Music is biologically part of human life, just as music is aesthetically part of human life.” . . .
Overall, music seems to involve the brain at almost every level. Even allowing for cultural differences in musical tastes, the researchers found evidence of music’s remarkable power to affect neural activity no matter where they look in the brain, from primitive regions in all animals to more recently evolved regions thought to be distinctively human.

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More benefits to playing music

December 19th, 2006 · how the brain works, music and the brain


A few days ago we were talking about the fact that people who listen to music use more of their brain. People who play music use even more of their brain! Right now we’re in one of the biggest holidays seasons of all and every one of these celebrations focuses on special music. Want to create warm, wonderful positive memories for your children and grandchildren? Put the music on, or even better, pull out the old sheet music, guitar, violin, flute or whatever! Music reinforces all of the poitive behaviors and thoughts that you are creating every minute of every day. Don’t waste a moment!

By the way, I’m having a big holiday sale on my website. If you buy a CD, tape or book, you’ll get a free electronic copy of the product and you’ll get free shipping though the 25th of this month! I’m also having a special on individual, personal consultations: If you buy a 30-minute consult, you’ll get an additional 15 minutes free; if you buy a 60-minute consultation, you’ll get an additional 30 minutes free. Don’t wait! Go to http://www.healingmusicenterprises.com/NeedSomeLast-minuteGifts.htm

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Want to use more of your brain? Play music!

December 9th, 2006 · how the brain works, music and the brain

At the Society for Neuroscience annual meeting in Los Angeles several years ago, Dr. Lawrence Parsons of the University of Texas-San Antonio discussed the results of his research which showed that significantly more of the brain was being used during music making that previously thought. We have been taught for years that most of us use very little of our brain but it’s not because we don’t want to…it’s because we don’t know how to access more of it! If playing music will help us use more of our brain, bring out those instruments: drums, piano, horns, harps! Let the music begin!

“An understanding of the brain locations that represent the separate aspects of music will help us identify the neural mechanisms that are specific to music, specific to language and are shared between the two,” says Parsons. “The finding that there is a right brain region for notes and musical passages that corresponds in location to a left brain region for letters and words illustrates how a neural mechanism may be present in each of the two brain hemispheres becomes special adapted for analogous purposes but with different information contexts.”

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Brains, Bicycles, and Brooks Hill

November 19th, 2006 · Uncategorized


How does the brain think up music? Why do certain songs just pop into your mind at especially opportune times? Earlier today I was riding my shiny new red bike and I was thinking about a time about 20 years ago when I was doing a bike ride with the local bike club. Somehow I had missed the information that this ride would include a very, very steep hill, nick-named “The Wall.” I always hated to get off my bike and walk it up a hill and so I put it in the lowest “granny gear” and stood up to pedal up the steep, steep hill. As I slowed down to a crawl a song popped into my head and I suddenly found myself pedalling in precise rhythm to “one, little two little three little indians…” Over and over I sang this song (internally) as I made my way up this hill. It was amazing how this seemed to give me the rhythm and the purpose and the distraction that I needed. Much sooner than I expected I was at the top of the hill, ego and reputation intact. Amazing!

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