UNIT III. THE POWER OF MUSIC
Can music impact our behaviour?
Art & Power
Can music impact our behaviour?
Art & Power
According to the John Hopkins Institute:
‘There are few things that stimulate the brain the way music does. If you want to keep your brain engaged throughout the aging process, listening to or playing music is a great tool. It provides a total brain workout.
Research has shown that listening to music can reduce anxiety, blood pressure, and pain as well as improve sleep quality, mood, mental alertness, and memory.’
The Brain-Music Connection
Experts are trying to understand how our brains can hear and play music. A stereo system puts out vibrations that travel through the air and somehow get inside the ear canal. These vibrations tickle the eardrum and are transmitted into an electrical signal that travels through the auditory nerve to the brain stem, where it is reassembled into something we perceive as music.
Johns Hopkins researchers have had dozens of jazz performers and rappers improvise music while lying down inside an fMRI (functional magnetic resonance imaging) machine to watch and see which areas of their brains light up.
Music is structural, mathematical and architectural. It’s based on relationships between one note and the next. You may not be aware of it, but your brain has to do a lot of computing to make sense of it.
(www.hopkinsmedicine.org)
Questions:
I.Why is communication underwater challenging?
II.Which whales are able to sing?
III.How far can a whale song reach?
IV.Why do whales sing?
V.Do they all sing the same songs?
VI.How has human activity impacted whales?
Get into groups of four and try to find songs that move you
An emotion will be given for you to find and you will have to explain why this song moves you to the class.