Yahoo Canada Web Search

Search results

  1. May 25, 2022 · Concerns have been raised that prolonged exposure to heavy metal music with aggressive themes can increase the risk of aggression, anger, antisocial behaviour, substance use, suicidal ideation, anxiety and depression in community and psychiatric populations. Although research often relies on correlational evidence for which causal inferences are not possible, it is often claimed that music ...

  2. May 21, 2015 · The claim that listening to extreme music causes anger, and expressions of anger such as aggression and delinquency have yet to be substantiated using controlled experimental methods. In this study, 39 extreme music listeners aged 18–34 years were subjected to an anger induction, followed by random assignment to 10 min of listening to extreme ...

    • Leah Sharman, Genevieve A. Dingle
    • 10.3389/fnhum.2015.00272
    • 2015
    • Front Hum Neurosci. 2015; 9: 272.
  3. Dec 23, 2020 · Additionally, dogs exposed to heavy metal music showed increased body shaking. Bowman et al. [11] played classical music (with low pitch and slow tempo) to shelter dogs and compared it to a control (no music). They found that when exposed to classical music, dogs spent less time barking and more time lying down.

    • Veronica Amaya, Kris Descovich, Mandy B A Paterson, Mandy B A Paterson, Clive J C Phillips
    • 10.3390/ani11010010
    • 2020
    • Animals (Basel). 2021 Jan; 11(1): 10.
  4. Sep 11, 2021 · The only exception was some decreased locomotor behavior after being presented with human heavy metal music. This result seemed paradoxical at first, until we realized that the tempos of the human heavy metal music matched the resting heart rate of the tamarins. Thus, music that is arousing for us could actually be calming for the tamarins.

    • Charles T. Snowdon
    • 2021
    • Dogs in Kennels Might Be Less Stressed While Listening to Classical Music.
    • It's Also Possible to Make Monkey Music.
    • Cows Produce More Milk When They're Listening to Relaxing Music.
    • Elephants Might Be Better at Playing Music Than Humans are.
    • Bird Brains React to Music in A Manner Similar to Human Brains.
    • Fish Know The Difference Between Composers.

    In a 2012 study [PDF] published in The Journal of Veterinary Behavior, researchers from Colorado State University monitored the behavior of 117 kenneled dogs, including their activity levels, vocalization, and body shaking. The researchers played a few different types of music to the dogs, including classical, heavy metal, and an altered type of cl...

    Cats weren't the first animals Snowdon, Savage, and Teie made species-specific music for. In 2009, they developed songs that mirrored the pitch of monkey calls. For their study, which was published in the journal Biology Letters, the scientists played the music for tamarin monkeys. Songs that were inspired by the calming calls the animals make caus...

    In 2001, researchers at the University of Leicester played various songs to 1000-strong herds of Friesian dairy cows. Over a period of nine weeks, the researchers alternated between fast music, slow music, and silence for 12 hours each day. They found that calming music—like R.E.M.'s "Everybody Hurts," Simon & Garfunkel's "Bridge Over Troubled Wate...

    Elephants are already known for their ability to paint with their trunks, but it turns out that they might be musically inclined as well. (Just check out this viral video of elephants swaying their trunks to violin music!) In northern Thailand, a conservationist named Richard Lair put together the Thai Elephant Orchestra, in which 16 elephants play...

    Birds are probably the most well-known singers of the animal kingdom. A few years ago, researchers at Emory University set out to learnwhether birds are actually making music, like humans do. To find out, they examined the brains of both male and female white-tailed sparrows as they listened to the sounds of male birds. When humans listen to music,...

    In 2013, a study was published in the journal Behavioral Processes that revealed that goldfish could be trained to distinguish between composers. Researchers at Keio University used pieces of music by two composers in the study: Igor Stravinsky and Johann Sebastian Bach. The goal was to train the goldfish to gnaw on a ball filled with food when the...

    • Meredith Danko
  5. risks and benets of engaging with heavy metal music with aggressive themes. The review is grounded within the eld of music psychology and aims to ensure that clinical deci-sion-making (e.g., discouraging or encouraging listening) is informed by empirical evidence. Dening Heavy Metal Music Heavy metal developed as a genre in the late 1960s and

  6. People also ask

  7. May 25, 2022 · Concerns have been raised that prolonged exposed to heavy metal music with aggressive themes can increase the risk of aggression, anger, antisocial behaviour, substance use, suicidal ideation ...

  1. People also search for