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  1. Music listening improves cognitive functions such as memory, attention span, and behavioral augmentation. In rehabilitation, music-based therapies have a high rate of success for the treatment of depression and anxiety and even in neurological disorders such as regaining the body integrity after a stroke episode.

  2. Feb 1, 2024 · Another hypothesis suggests that, syntax in language and music is governed by hierarchical organization, as fundamental features of hierarchical control in the brain include functional architecture of the frontal cortex, which maintains abstract representations in anterior parts of the brain and more concrete representations preferentially in posterior parts, dual control function (i.e ...

  3. Oct 7, 2020 · Music activates just about all of the brain. Music has been shown to activate some of the broadest and most diverse networks of the brain. Of course, music activates the auditory cortex in the temporal lobes close to your ears, but that’s just the beginning. The parts of the brain involved in emotion are not only activated during emotional ...

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  4. Music also lights up nearly all of the brain — including the hippocampus and amygdala, which activate emotional responses to music through memory; the limbic system, which governs pleasure, motivation, and reward; and the body’s motor system. This is why “it’s easy to tap your feet or clap your hands to musical rhythms,” says Andrew Budson, MD ’93, chief of cognitive and behavioral ...

  5. Activating the Brain. The process by which we’re able to perceive a series of sounds as music is incredibly complex, Silbersweig and BWH psychiatry colleague Samata Sharma, MD, explained in a 2018 paper on the neurobiological effects of music on the brain. It starts with sound waves entering the ear, striking the eardrum, and causing ...

  6. In this paper, we have focused on how certain individual, cultural, and acoustic factors affect music listening with a special focus on their neurobiological underpinnings, somewhat in line with a very recent meta-analysis on music listening and imagery (see Figure 3), which conceives of music mainly as a sensorimotor and cognitive process, but leaving out most of the affective and even more ...

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  8. Comparison of the acute autonomic and sustained autonomic and health effects of music listening, music-making and physical activity. The unclear impact of music listening and music-making on autonomic tone and related health outcomes (Fancourt and Finn, 2020; McCrary et al., 2021) is noted by the curved arrow containing question marks. * does not apply to all types of music listening; some ...

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