Tag Archives: Music and the brain

Neuroscience and Music: A likely relationship

Music & the brain

Final in the 6 part series of Music and the Brain Neuroscience has and continues to embrace music as a focus for research. Why has music, not other art forms, received this kind of attention and become favoured in brain research?  Dr. Michael Thaut, Professor of Music and Professor of Neuroscience at Colorado State University...

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EARWORMS – When songs get stuck

earworm

Part 5 – Special series on Music and the Brain One of my vivid childhood memories is an experience I had while swimming in the lake at my grandparents’ cottage in Haliburton. While puddling around the dock area, I got a leech, more commonly known as blood sucker, stuck on my leg. Out came the...

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Musical Savants

Musical Savants

Part 4 – Special series on Music and the Brain  Savant syndrome is a rare condition in which people with developmental disorders and impaired cognitive ability have an area of expertise. Most savants are victims of early infant autism which strikes seven children in a hundred thousand. Of these, as many as one in ten...

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The Science of Sad Sounds

Part 3 – Special Series on Music and the Brain Do you ever wonder why we may like to listen to sad music? Why do people create sad song playlists on their ipods? We often listen to music that either matches our mood or that will help change our mood. But sadness is normally an...

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Music and Synesthesia

JR's Character Map

Part 2 – Special Series on Music  and the Brain For twenty years, one of my sons has played or sung notes he sees in color. On road trips, he sees highway signs like rainbows. Last year, he felt some relief as he learned in a psychology course about synesthesia and that he wasn’t weird...

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