The Neuroscience of Music

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The Neuroscience of Music
One could approach any random stranger on the street and ask for a favorite song of theirs; they’d have it in a few seconds. Everyone knows the tingling feeling that rushes down your spine when your favorite part of a song comes up. And yet, I seriously doubt anyone would be able to explain how they recognize these things so candidly, or why their mind is so responsive to the phenomenon of music. The field of neuroscience as it relates to music has only just begun to be explored, and it’s growing fast. Music has no biological basis in our evolution (Petr, “Jazzing Up Neuroscience”), and until very recently has been given little thought. The truth of it is, though, music the way we see it goes far deeper into the way it effects our innermost thoughts than most of us realize. Dancing and moving to music, the sensations during melodic verses, even our ability to recall lyrics and tunes with incredible accuracy...it all ties back to the biochemistry in our brain. Modern science shows that music can reach out into our minds as far as memory, emotions, and of course auditory and motor functions, though most people would be surprised at just how gripping and entire the effects on these aspects of our brain can be.
Part of the reason radio jingles and music in the background of commercials make modern advertising so successful is because of the strong bond between music and memory. People’s ability to recall lyrics in a snap, hum show tunes they heard in a window display as they walk down the street, and even performing music the way we do roots from that music being firmly planted in our memories. 8 years ago there was a news article in the New York Times that looked into this relationship a bit, including a r...

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...ing...”). Music is known to increase performance rates for many perceptual and cognitive tasks (Reck, Ovary, “Preface...”), but only recently has it been observed to literally transform our brain, as far as what we use to hear and process it. What music training and music therapy do is use music to tone auditory skills through listening exercises and in many cases be put to use to help with psychological issues such as ADHD, autism, dyslexia and central auditory processing disorders (Kraus et. al.). Through this process, however, the brain’s fundamental structure often changes or adapts itself to the circumstances of exercising auditory components in our brain. These capabilities are both radical and rare, but are scientifically proven. Music has the ability to influence our fine motor skills, coordinated movement, and also fundamentally alter our auditory functions.

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