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How Does Music Affect Your Brain? | Tech Effects | WIRED

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    ♪ (music) ♪
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    (narrator) These days,
    you hear music all the time.
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    It wakes us up, motivates our workouts,
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    keeps us company on our commutes.
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    It doesn't matter
    what kind of music it is,
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    music itself has the ability
    to affect our moods and our bodies
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    in all sorts of ways.
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    We nod our heads, we sway, dance.
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    Music can give us chills,
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    even make us cry.
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    Music activates every area
    of the brain that we have so far mapped.
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    In fact, there's no area
    of the brain we know about
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    that music doesn't touch in some way.
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    But what's behind all that?
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    What exactly does music do to us?
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    To find out, I went to a whole series of tests
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    designed to measure my responses to music.
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    I met some kids whose brains
    may actually be changing,
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    thanks to those hours
    of learning, practice, and performing.
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    I spoke with a therapist who used music
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    to help former congresswoman
    Gabrielle Giffords
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    learn to speak again,
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    and got a glimpse inside the brain
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    of a two-time winning artist
    while he played...
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    ( )
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    ...all to find out how music affects us.
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    ♪ (music) ♪
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    So what's going on
    when we listen to music?
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    We visited the USC Brain
    and Creativity Institute,
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    where I had my head examined, literally,
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    to try to figure it out.
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    I'm going to go into this [FMRI] machine,
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    a tiny tube will surround me.
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    We'll get a baseline reading of my brain,
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    and then I'm going to listen
    to some music.
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    We're going to see how my brain responds.
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    Just close your eyes, relax,
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    and try and get into the music
    as best you can, okay?
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    ♪ (music) ♪
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    And here's what we saw.
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    These are scans of my brain.
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    The areas in red are where
    my activity is above average;
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    in blue, below average.
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    As you can see,
    there is red activity all over my brain,
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    not just in one specific area.
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    Twenty-five years ago,
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    the idea was that language
    is on the left side of the brain
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    and music is in
    the right side of the brain.
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    But now that we've got
    better quality tools,
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    higher resolution neuro-imaging
    and better experimental methods,
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    we've discovered that's not at all right.
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    How does that play out
    in different regions of the brain?
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    When music enters
    and then gets shuttled off
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    to different parts of the brain,
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    it stops at specialized processing units
    in auditory cortex,
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    they track loudness and pitch and rhythm
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    and [tambour] and things like that.
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    There's visual cortex activation
    when you're reading music as a musician
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    or watching music,
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    motor cortex
    when you're tapping your feet,
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    snapping your fingers, clapping you hands;
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    and cerebellum which mediates
    the emotional responses;
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    the memory and the hippocampus,
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    hearing a familiar passage,
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    finding it somewhere in your memory banks.
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    Music is going on
    in both halves of your brain,
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    the left and the right,
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    the front and the back,
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    the inside and the outside.
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    ♪ (music) ♪
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    So what about a musicians's brain?
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    To play a piece of music
    engages so many things:
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    motor systems, timing systems,
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    memory systems, hearing systems.
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    There's all sorts
    of brain activity happening.
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    It's a very robust thing to play music.
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    ♪ (music) ♪
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    I'm Alex Jacob Robertson.
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    I'm Nathan Glenn Robertson.
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    We asked these 11-year old musicians
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    to tell us what's going through
    their minds when they play.
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    Some of the most important things
    are I think good postures,
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    getting the note right,
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    legato, staccato.
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    (violin)
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    For the violin, you need to hold
    your hand at the right place,
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    and you need to be in tune,
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    and then you also have to have
    not only the right intonation
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    but the right sound,
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    and then you also need
    to have great vibrato.
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    There's lot of things to think about.
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    (violin)
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    (narrator) Back at USC,
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    researchers have been studying kids
    who play music over the past five years
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    to see how it affects their development.
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    The multi-tasking areas of their brains
    understandable lit up,
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    but they've seen other results too.
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    Music training
    over the course of five years
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    has had benefits in cognitive skills
    and decision making,
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    also had some benefits in social behavior,
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    and we've also seen changes
    in the associated brain structures.
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    (narrator) Did you hear that?
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    Changes in brain structures!
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    They found that the brains of children
    who have studied music
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    have stronger connections
    between the left and right hemispheres,
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    and that can make them better,
    more creative problem solvers.
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    And then there's emotion.
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    (emotional music)
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    When you hear a piece like this,
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    it's easy to understand why emotions
    play such a big part in music.
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    This song by Camille Saint-Saëns is known
    as the music for the dying swan in ballet.
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    While it might move ballerinas to dance,
    it inspires different reactions in others.
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    ( )
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    Some people get goosebumps, chills.
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    That weird tingly sensation that you get
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    when a great piece of music
    just hits you in the right way?
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    It's called frisson,
    and not everyone gets it,
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    but it turns out I do.
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    Now we're going to have you listen
    to some pieces of music.
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    Okay.
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    When you experience a chill, if you do,
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    I want you to just press this space bar
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    so we have an indication
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    of when those peak moments
    of enjoyment are happening.
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    Okay.
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    Matt Sachs, a PhD candidate at USC,
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    wired me up to measure
    my physiological response.
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    So when I'm feeling
    that emotional connection
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    that has a physical manifestation,
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    we'll see what my body is actually doing?
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    Exactly.
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    (dramatic music)
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    Alright, how was that?
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    That was-- that had a lot of them.
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    We got them all.
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    Now full disclosure:
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    Back in the day, I played the cello,
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    which might have something to do
    with why that particular song affected me.
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    Nice hair!
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    But it turns out the brain
    is at work here too.
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    We processed the difference
    between this pathway
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    that connects the auditory regions
    is on the side of the brain here,
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    to the emotional regions,
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    and we showed that the tract
    actually that connects those two regions
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    is stronger,
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    there's more fibers in that region
    in the people who get chills.
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    (narrator) Which means
    that some people's brains
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    might have better communication
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    between what they hear and how they feel.
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    The music itself also plays
    a role in frisson.
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    Sachs uses different songs in his lectures
    to see if students get it.
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    I'll say raise your hand
    when you get a chill
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    and I'll play a piece of music,
    a classical piece,
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    and maybe half the people will get it.
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    (narrator) Then he plays this..
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    ( )
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    Rolling Stone's Give me Shelter.
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    Have you ever seen the movie
    20 Feet from Stardom?
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    The documentary about back up singers?
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    Yeah.
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    There's a part where they isolate
    the vocals from Give me Shelter.
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    ♪ ( ) ♪
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    And I play that,
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    and 90% of the people experience chills,
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    sort of independent of where I go.
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    I have to tell you, bringing that up
    made me think about it
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    and I got that little kind of thing
    at the back of my neck.
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    (narrator) But why would that happen?
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    The high pitched notes that she hit
    almost sounds like a scream
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    and it's very important ancestrally for us
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    to be able to pay attention to a scream,
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    figure out what's going on,
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    and either run or fight,
    whatever we need to do.
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    (narrator) So how come
    that manifests as pleasure?
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    Well it's because our pre-frontal cortex,
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    the more rational, thinking part
    of the brain kicks in.
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    So you realize very quickly,
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    after you have
    this really quick startle reflex,
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    that there's nothing actually threatening
    about the piece of music,
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    that you're sitting in a safe space
    with your headphones on,
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    and it's in that reappraisal
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    that we tend to think
    of the pleasure responses emerging.
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    And whether you find listening to music
    so pleasurable you get chills
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    or you absolutely despise a song,
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    it can produce absolutely
    fascinating effects in the brain.
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    According to [Levitan], music we enjoy
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    triggers the brain's
    internal opioid system--
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    yes, opioid system.
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    And just like the opioids
    that come in pill form
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    these chemicals make you feel good
    and help relieve pain.
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    And music you don't like?
    Well, that releases cortisol,
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    the notorious stress hormone.
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    But that's not even the half of what music
    can do in the brain.
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    Can you turn on the lights?
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    (narrator) When former Congresswomen
    Gabrielle Giffords
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    was shot in 2011
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    the left side of her brain
    was severely damaged,
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    leaving her struggling to speak,
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    a condition called aphasia.
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    Gabby, are you frustrated?
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    (narrator) But to get an idea
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    of just how powerful
    music's effect on the brain can be,
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    watch this video.
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    You ready?
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    (together) This little light of mine
    I'm gonna let it shine.
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    (narrator) That word that she'd been
    struggling to say, "light,"
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    came easily in song.
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    Why would she be able to sing a word
    when she's unable to say it?
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    What we know about the brain
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    is that the left hemisphere
    controls language,
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    and there are many
    other parts of the brain
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    that have music access.
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    Music therapist Maegan Morrow's job
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    is to help patients use
    those other pathways to regain language.
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    Sometimes I compare it
    to being in traffic,
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    and you can't move any further,
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    but you might need to exit
    and take the feeder road
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    to get you to your destination.
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    So music is basically
    like that feeder road
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    to the new destination.
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    (narrator) Like a detour.
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    So we know that music
    can help us relearn things like speech
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    by accessing alternative
    pathways in the brain
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    and that learning to play music
    can help strengthen brain connections.
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    But what about making music?
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    To make music is like--
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    it's the language of humanity.
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    No matter where I go in the world,
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    if I'm playing something,
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    it doesn't matter if someone
    can't speak the language--
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    if they're into it, they're into it.
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    (narrator) This is Xavier Dphrepaulezz,
    better known as Fantastic Negrito.
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    We brought him to UCSF
    to meet Charles Limb,
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    a neuroscientist
    who studies musical creativity.
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    The Duffler's up next.
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    (narrator) To understand
    how Fantastic Negrito's brain works
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    when making music,
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    Dr. Limb had him play on of his songs
    while going through the fMRI.
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    (Fantastic Negrito singing)
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    (narrator) So how did his brain respond?
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    The areas that process sensory
    and motor skills, along with sounds,
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    lit up.
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    You can see them here in red and yellow.
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    Makes sense, right?
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    But here's the really interesting part.
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    Limb asked him to improvise
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    to see what happens when he's creating
    something totally original.
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    (Fantastic Negrito singing)
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    Now watch what happens to his brain?
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    Stop!
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    (laughter)
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    Now watch what happens to his brain.
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    The areas that were active before,
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    the ones that deal
    with motor skills and sounds,
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    are even more active.
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    But see how there's way more blue
    in the front of his brain?
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    That's the pre-frontal cortex,
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    and it's associated with effortful planning
    and conscience self-monitoring,
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    and it's blue because it's less active.
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    We see that the pre-frontal cortex
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    appears to be really shutting down
    in these moments of high creativity,
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    kind of like letting of of these conscious
    self-censoring or self-monitoring areas
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    that normally are there
    to help control our output.
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    (narrator) And Limb says
    it's about more than just letting go.
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    You view it from a perspective of survival.
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    If human beings only could do
    memorized route responses,
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    we'd be long gone.
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    It is not just the thing that happens
    in clubs and in jazz bars,
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    it's actually maybe
    the most fundamental form
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    of what it means to be human,
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    to come up with new ideas.
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    (singing)
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    (narrator) So music is so much more
    than notes on a page.
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    It can change the way we think
    and speak and feel.
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    But is there a limit
    to what science can tell us about music?
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    Just when I discovered
    the answer to one thing,
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    five new questions pop up
    that are more interesting than the first,
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    and I've gained an appreciation
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    for how complex the music-making
    and music-listening system is.
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    It's not demystified for me at all.
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    It's more mysterious than ever.
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    (singing)
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    (applause)
Title:
How Does Music Affect Your Brain? | Tech Effects | WIRED
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Amplifying Voices
Project:
Musical Education
Duration:
12:02

English subtitles

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