David Baxter PhD
Late Founder
Music and the Mind
by robinfluegge
Sun, 10/26/2008
Most of us have experienced influential music at some point in our lives. For some, music can cause great emotion and be very thought or action provoking. Example of this kind of influence can often be seen at concerts, where audience members can become very involved in the music, dancing and singing along. For others, music if just nice to hear in the background and doesn?t play a large role in emotion. Oliver Sacks, a clinical professor of neurology at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine has studied the influence music can have on patients with brain disorders.
Sacks has found that music seems to be helpful and therapeutic in some patients with Parkinson?s disease. Some types of music have shown to alleviate uncontrollable movements and tics, usually legato, mellow music. Similar results were seen in patients with Tourette?s syndrome. These patients experienced reduction or temporary elimination in tics associated with the disease. Again, the kind of music heard affected the action of the symptoms; fast, staccato music often made the tics worse while slower, calm music alleviated symptoms.
While music can be therapeutic in some, it can trigger seizures in others. Sacks talked about patients he?s worked with who have temporal lobe seizures triggered by varying types of music: from Frank Sinatra to classical and rock as well. This type of musically-provoked epilepsy is referred to as musicogenic epilepsy, (2531, Sacks).
Many of us have experienced other affects of music, such as ?earworms,? (2530, Sacks). Earworms occur when certain songs or musical phrases get caught in our minds. According to Sacks, not everyone experiences this phenomenon to the same degree. I was surprised to learn this; I thought everyone got ABBA songs stuck in their heads for days on end! On the same note, he argued that some people are emotionally affected by certain types of music, while others are not.
Why is it that some people are severely affected by music to the point of seizing, while some are indifferent to music and others are relieved by music? What aspects of the human body relate to music? It may be possible that specific musical characteristics like time, momentum and sonic patterns relate to these physiological responses? The response of the human body to musical experiences seems to be very therapeutic in some cases and the science behind it is still mostly unknown. It is interesting to think about the possible links and potential in medical treatments associated with music and the mind.
Source: The power of music. Oliver Sacks. http://brain.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/full/129/10/2528
by robinfluegge
Sun, 10/26/2008
Most of us have experienced influential music at some point in our lives. For some, music can cause great emotion and be very thought or action provoking. Example of this kind of influence can often be seen at concerts, where audience members can become very involved in the music, dancing and singing along. For others, music if just nice to hear in the background and doesn?t play a large role in emotion. Oliver Sacks, a clinical professor of neurology at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine has studied the influence music can have on patients with brain disorders.
Sacks has found that music seems to be helpful and therapeutic in some patients with Parkinson?s disease. Some types of music have shown to alleviate uncontrollable movements and tics, usually legato, mellow music. Similar results were seen in patients with Tourette?s syndrome. These patients experienced reduction or temporary elimination in tics associated with the disease. Again, the kind of music heard affected the action of the symptoms; fast, staccato music often made the tics worse while slower, calm music alleviated symptoms.
While music can be therapeutic in some, it can trigger seizures in others. Sacks talked about patients he?s worked with who have temporal lobe seizures triggered by varying types of music: from Frank Sinatra to classical and rock as well. This type of musically-provoked epilepsy is referred to as musicogenic epilepsy, (2531, Sacks).
Many of us have experienced other affects of music, such as ?earworms,? (2530, Sacks). Earworms occur when certain songs or musical phrases get caught in our minds. According to Sacks, not everyone experiences this phenomenon to the same degree. I was surprised to learn this; I thought everyone got ABBA songs stuck in their heads for days on end! On the same note, he argued that some people are emotionally affected by certain types of music, while others are not.
Why is it that some people are severely affected by music to the point of seizing, while some are indifferent to music and others are relieved by music? What aspects of the human body relate to music? It may be possible that specific musical characteristics like time, momentum and sonic patterns relate to these physiological responses? The response of the human body to musical experiences seems to be very therapeutic in some cases and the science behind it is still mostly unknown. It is interesting to think about the possible links and potential in medical treatments associated with music and the mind.
Source: The power of music. Oliver Sacks. http://brain.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/full/129/10/2528