Explore the science behind musical earworms, those persistent songs stuck in your head, and learn how to manage them.
You’ve experienced it, right? Listening to a song that transports you somewhere you can’t explain. Slow or fast, rock, pop, ...
In 2020 an incredible video went viral. It featured a former ballet dancer named Marta Cinta González Saldaña, suffering from ...
People with musical anhedonia do not enjoy music but still feel the urge to move. Movement itself may generate pleasure.
A new study finds that the urge to move to music—known as groove—is a distinct physiological response, separate from musical ...
One of the most powerful benefits of music is its ability to enhance performance, allowing you to work faster and for a ...
We already know that listening to loud music can damage hearing over time. However, a BBC report raises concerns about a ...
Uncover the instinctual urge to dance and its connection to music. Learn how rhythm affects our bodies and minds.
The public is invited to “Music, the Brain, and Spycraft” presented by Del Mar-Leucadia and Carlsbad-Oceanside-Vista branches ...
The Brain, the Beat, and the Beauty of Neurological Electricity" was an event hosted by Carolina Performing Arts in ...
The psychology experiment measures the ability of people to focus on a central stimulus, relayed along with a "flanking" signal. This surrounding stimulus is either matching the target or incongruent ...