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17 Shocking Facts Of What Music Does To Human Health And Brain Development by made4naija(f): 5:28pm On May 24, 2018
Introduction

Today the music is just an audio pleasure, but earlier it was reckoned as a powerful force. The ancient people considered it a form of communication affecting the emotions without words and thought.
The great masters of ancient India, China, Greece, and Rome used music and sound to improve human health. Plato, Cicero, and Seneca wanted the state to ban certain harmful music which may affect the behavior of society.
The philosophers like Confucius, Pythagoras, Democritus, Aristotle, and Galen believed that the music had both positive and negative effects on human health.
The traditional Indian and Chinese medicines mention that certain instruments/sounds have beneficial effects on specific organs. follow these write-up step by step till the end to discover more of what music can do to you.

1. Music makes you smarter.

It’s no secret music has a serious impact on a person’s brain activity — whether that’s how it engages different parts of the brain, how humans memorize tunes and lyrics or how different types of melodies and rhythms can elicit different emotional responses. It’s even been reported that ambient noise, played at a moderate volume, can encourage creativity, and that listening to music can help repair brain damage.

Yet the news is even better for musicians, particularly those who begin playing an instrument at an early age. According to some studies, music learning can encourage the development of stronger vocabularies and a better handle on nonverbal reasoning. In the journal News in Health, Harvard Medical School neuroscientist Gottfried Schlaug even says that the nerve makeup of musicians differs from non-musicians, citing studies that musicians’ minds have more bundles of nerves bridging the left side of the brain to the right.
“When you make music, it engages many different areas of the brain, including visual, auditory and motor areas,” Schlaug told News in Health. “That’s why music making is also of potential interest in treating neurologic disorders.”
Brain
Like few other activities, the music involves the use of the whole brain. It improves memory, attention, physical coordination and mental development. The classical music stimulates the regeneration of brain cells.
Certain music improves the mood, intelligence, motivation and concentration. It also improves the quality of life and aids in physical, emotional, cognitive, and social needs. It helps in the treatment of autism, dementia, Alzheimer’s, chronic pain, emotional trauma, mental disorders, and depression. Music decreases anxiety, anger, stress, and frustration.

2. Sad music doesn’t necessarily make us SAD

According to a study in Frontiers in Psychology in 2013, sad music may not make you break down in tears. The findings suggest music can spark two types of emotional responses — perceived emotion and felt emotion. That means that though sad music is recognizably sad to many, experiencing it is not an emotionally darkening experience.
After conducting a survey of 44 participants, “The results revealed that the sad music was perceived to be more tragic, whereas the actual experiences of the participants listening to the sad music induced them to feel more romantic, more blithe, and less tragic emotions than they actually perceived with respect to the same music,” the study found. “Thus, the participants experienced ambivalent emotions when they listened to the sad music.”

3. Music is thought to have positive medicinal effects

Music has long been used in healing rituals around the world, and science suggests there’s a good reason that’s been the case. Plato suggested using music to treat anxiety, Dawn Kent wrote in a 2006 thesis for Harvard University titled “The Effect of Music on the Human Body and Mind,” while Aristotle categorized music as a therapeutic tool, particularly to treat those with volatile emotions. And in ancient Greece, Apollo ruled both music and healing.
“Physiologically, music has a distinct effect on many biological processes,” Kent wrote. “It inhibits the occurrence of fatigue, as well as changes the pulse and respiration rates, external blood pressure levels and psychogalvanic effect.”
As proof, Kent points to Michelle Lefevre’s 2004 book, Playing With Sound: The Therapeutic Use of Music in Direct Work With Children, which argues that high-pitched tones can sometimes lead to feelings of panic and increased anxiety.
One theory even introduces something called the “Mozart effect,” and a study that builds on the theory found that the infamous composer’s “Piano Sonata in D Major” led to decreased epilepsy in patients — a finding that even extended to patients in comas.

4. Music can increase one’s libido

“Music can increase one’s libido,” said Curtis Levang, a clinical psychologist and marriage and family therapist, Everyday Healthreported. And speaking to the publication, urologist Y. Mark Hong said music and sex are alike, in that both can be emotionally charged experiences. Therefore, he said, it’s possible music can help men with low testosterone up their sex drives, as listening to music can elevate serotonin levels in a person’s body.
And it’s even possible that music can help single folks score a date. According to a study by researchers in France, single women who had listened to romantic music were more likely to hand out their phone numbers than those participants who had listened to neutral music prior to be asked out.

5. Effect of Music on Heart Surgery

Music has therapeutic properties. The patients who listened to music during and after open heart surgery recovered soon.
The researchers at Tokyo University in Japan performed heart surgery on a group of male mice to study the effects of different types of music on their recovery. The mice were exposed to Verdi’s music, Mozart sonatas and the songs of an Irish singer En-ya. In first two cases, the mice lived twenty days longer than those without music or with single frequency tone or of the third group. The immune system of control group rejected the foreign tissues.
Effects of music and sound on human health
Music is not just a harmless background noise created by musical instruments. The modern scientific research confirms the opinion of ancient philosophers that music and sound have both harmful and beneficial effects on people, plants, and animals.

SOURCE : https://www.made4naija.com/2018/04/17-shocking-facts-of-what-music-does-to-human-health-and-brain-development/

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Re: 17 Shocking Facts Of What Music Does To Human Health And Brain Development by made4naija(f): 7:18pm On May 24, 2018
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Re: 17 Shocking Facts Of What Music Does To Human Health And Brain Development by made4naija(f): 5:48am On May 25, 2018
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Re: 17 Shocking Facts Of What Music Does To Human Health And Brain Development by made4naija(f): 10:06am On May 25, 2018
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Re: 17 Shocking Facts Of What Music Does To Human Health And Brain Development by mary4(f): 7:32am On Jun 13, 2018
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