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Effects Of Music


Kassie

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Kassie Apprentice

i'm doing a project on different types of music and the effects they have on people. is anyone an expert here or have any useful information. it would really help. i dont want to bore you out so if any one has info please post. thanks


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blueeyedmanda Community Regular

Soft music lullabys or just soft instrumentals are very relaxing, I can be having a hard time falling asleep and using a soft music celiac disease will help me drift off. Is this the kind of help you are looking for?

Fiddle-Faddle Community Regular

I have a couple of degrees in music, and play professionally, not that that makes me any more of an expert than anyone else who loves music! The most musically knowledgeable person I ever met played only one thing--the radio!

I do remember reading a study in college. Rats were the subject, and they were in cages. One cage had Mozart piped in, one had late Schoenberg (very odd-sounding, 20th century orchestral music with no discernable melody but with lots of beeping and bapping) piped in, and the control group had no music at all.

The control group, as expected, was totally normal. The Mozart rats grew larger and performed far better on Rat Intelligence tests. The Schoenberg rats went bonkers, trying to bite each other and the glass walls of their cage.

Hmmmmmm.

tarnalberry Community Regular

heh... my ipod playlists are designed by tempo - mellow uptempo, happy upbeat, loud and fast, chillout. :)

2kids4me Contributor

music therapy is used with children affected by autism to help with sensory integration.

Sandy

I have included a site and brief bits from it:

Open Original Shared Link

Music Therapy is particularly useful with autistic children owing in part to the nonverbal, non threatening nature of the medium. Parallel music activities are designed to support the objectives of the child as observed by the therapist or as indicated by a parent, teacher or other professional. A music therapist might observe, for instance, the child's need to socially interact with others. Musical games like passing a ball back and forth to music or playing sticks and cymbals with another person might be used to foster this interaction.

Music Therapy is particularly effective in the development and remediation of speech. The severe deficit in communication observed among autistic children includes expressive speech which may be nonexistent or impersonal. Speech can range from complete mutism to grunts, cries, explosive shrieks, guttural sounds, and humming.

There may be musically intoned vocalizations with some consonant-vowel combinations, a sophisticated babbling interspersed with vaguely recognizable word-like sounds, or a seemingly foreign sounding jargon. Higher level autistic speech may involve echolalia, delayed echolalia or pronominal reversal, while some children may progress to appropriate phrases, sentences, and longer sentences with non expressive or monotonic speech. Since autistic children are often mainstreamed into music classes in the public schools, a music teacher may experience the rewards of having an autistic child involved in music activities while assisting with language.

debmidge Rising Star

Merchandisers use music in stores the same way as the rats in the experiment. Calm, happy music produced more sales; wild erratic music drove shoppers away : subconsciously.

darlindeb25 Collaborator

So true Deb, if I go into a store that is playing rap music, I leave--it makes me nervous, I can't concentrate, and I become aggitated, like those rats!!!!!

I love country music and find it keeps me focused. We are all different.

I am a member of many spiritual forums and I have learned that music can talk to us. Angels can send us messages through music. When the same song keeps running through your mind, over and over, there is a message in it.

It's all good.


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almostnrn Explorer

When my kids were really young and I couldn't calm them I would play classical music and it would truely soothe and calm them down within minutes. There was one exception...my middle son, Josh. He could be in the middle of the worst temper tantrum, screaming fit ever and as soon as he heard Cheryl Crowe "All I wanna do is have some fun" he would stop immediately and be happy and laughing by the end of the song. I always found that so bizarre and it would just crack me up to see that transformation happen.

Also I noticed that when a store I once worked in played the oldies (50's, 60's ect) on the radio the customers were sooo much more happy and so were the employees. How could you not be happy listening to that, it is wonderful music. Hey maybe that is the way to solve all the needless violence that goes on, banish all the new music and only play oldies!

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