Addicted to Music

Addicted to Music Welcome to Addicted to Music's Official Page. It's all about 'MUSIC'. ©Addicted to Music BD Entertainment.
█║▌█│║▌║│█║▌│║█ and whatever sounds good!!!
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MUSIC
Thatz what satellite radio is for!! haha
The kinds of music I mostly listen to is Trance, dance/techno, punk, metal, rock, alternative, pop, sometimes hip-hop.. I luv listening to music! I like listening to new stuff, and other pplz interests in music!!! So keep listening & keep SHARING what you hear!! What Is Music? Music is a universal language. Maybe we will answer it with saying the det

ailed mechanics about music, like instrument, rhythms, chords, tempo, notes, harmony, bass, and melody. But it will be hard to answer ‘What is it for?’ , the simple answer is music is something enjoyable, it make us feels good. We could expand on this a bit and say that music creates emotions or interact with the emotions we already feel. It makes us want to dance or sing. It makes us feel happy or sad, inspired or uplifted. It affects our mood in all kinds of infinite ways. Music is different things to different people:
According to Ian Skelly, author of the article ‘Beauty Speaks’, above all things “music has a transcendental significance that is captured in the beautiful patterns of Nature and architecture – a kind of ‘frozen music’. Mark Kidel, author of ‘Conversations and Crossroads’, music can bridge cultures in a universal ‘conversation’ that is beyond intellect or reason, but which is heartfelt. Brian Eno said that music brings the joy of unexpected and beautiful sound, and to singer/songwriters like myself: music ( and singing in particular ) takes us to a world apart: a world beyond self and ego; a place of emotion that touches the soul. Music for simulation

Music and Stress Relief:
How to use music in your daily life?. You can use music in your daily life and achieve many stress relief benefits on your own. One of the great benefits of music as a stress reliever is that it can be used while you conduct your regular activities so that it really does not take time away from your busy schedule. Music provides a wonderful backdrop for your life so that you can find increased enjoyment from what you’re doing and also reduce stress from your day. Mozart Effect:
The doctors and scientists recommend using the classical music in stimulating the babies, mother pregnant, and for children. Does playing classical music to babies make a difference? Opinion is divided; but many experts think that it may stimulate the brain in a way that helps educational and emotional development.It's known as the Mozart Effect, a theory which is credited with boosting IQ, improving health, strengthening family ties and even producing the occasional child prodigy. Numerous studies conclude that playing music to babies in the womb and in the early years helps build the neural bridges along which thoughts and information travel. And research suggests it can stimulate the brain's alpha waves, creating a feeling of calm; a recent study of premature infants found that they were soothed by the music. Music Therapy

What is music therapy? Music therapy is an interpersonal process in which the therapist uses music and all of its facets-physical, emotional, mental, social, aesthetic, and spiritual-to help clients to improve or maintain their health. In some instances, the client's needs are addressed directly through music; in others they are addressed through the relationships that develop between the client and therapist. Music therapy is used with individuals of all ages and with a variety of conditions, including: psychiatric disorders, medical problems, physical handicaps, sensory impairments, developmental disabilities, substance abuse, communication disorders, interpersonal problems, and aging. It is also used to: improve learning, build self-esteem, reduce stress, support physical exercise, and facilitate a host of other health-related activities

There is some study finding on the health effects of music therapy:

1) Music Therapy and Depression
Music therapy may help some patients fight depression, according to a review published in 2008. Researchers sized up data from five previously published studies, four of which found that participants receiving music therapy were more likely to see a decrease in depression symptoms (compared to those who did not receive music therapy). According to the review's authors, patients appeared to experience the greatest benefits when therapists used theory-based therapeutic techniques, such as painting to music and improvised singing.

2) Music Therapy and Stress
Music therapy may help ease stress in pregnancy, according to a 2008 study of 236 healthy pregnant women. Compared to a control group, the 116 study members who received music therapy showed significantly greater reductions in stress, anxiety, and depression. The music therapy involved listening to a half-hour of soothing music twice daily for two weeks. In a research review published in 2009, investigators found that listening to music may also benefit patients who experience severe stress and anxiety associated with having coronary heart disease. The review included two studies on patients treated by trained music therapists. Results showed that music listening had a beneficial effect on blood pressure, heart rate, respiratory rate, and pain in people with coronary heart disease.

3) Music Therapy and Autism
Music therapy may help improve communication skills in children with autistic spectrum disorder, according to a review published in 2006. However, the review's authors note that the included studies were of "limited applicability to clinical practice" and that "more research is needed to examine whether the effects of music therapy are enduring." Children with autism, according to study results, see the musical instrument as something fun. These children are usually very fond shapes, touching and well produced sound. Therefore, this musical instrument can become an intermediary to build relationships between children with autism with other individuals. Music therapy can also help children with the ability to communicate how to improve vocal production and stimulate conversation and mental processes in terms of understanding and recognizing. The therapist will try to create communication links between the behaviors of children with a particular sound. Children with autism are usually more easily identify and more open to the sound than the verbal approach. Awareness of this music and the relationship between the actions of children with music has the potential to encourage communication. Most children with autism are less able to respond to stimuli that should help them feel the right emotion. But, because children with autism can respond well to music, the music therapy can help children by providing an environment free from fear. During the therapy session, every child has the freedom to express themselves as they wish, in accordance with their own way. They can make a scene, hitting the instruments, shouting and expressing pleasure will satisfy emotions. In addition, music therapy also helps children with autism:
* Teach social skills
* Improve understanding of language
* Encourage the desire to communicate
* Teach children to express themselves creatively
* Reduce the conversation that is not communicative
* Reducing the repetition of words spoken by another person in an instant and uncontrolled.

4) Music Therapy and Cancer
Research suggests that music therapy may offer a number of benefits for people coping with cancer. For instance, music therapy has been shown to reduce anxiety in patients receiving radiation therapy, as well as ease nausea and vomiting resulting from high-dose chemotherapy. How Does Music Affect the Brain? Although we all listen to music most of us never consider what music is doing to our brains cognitively speaking. Is it helping us learn? Is it having any affect
at all? Does the affect it may have differ if we merely listen to music as opposed to actually playing an instrument? In my research on this topic I have discovered the answers to these questions and found them very interesting and enlightening.Music does affect our brains. Music can help you memorize information and can even help treat depression and anxiety. In a research study performed in North Texas researchers tested college students using music to assist in the aid of memorization. The test was successful. The students who listened to Handel's Water Music in the background and were asked to visualize an image of the word when reviewing were more successful than those who did not listen to music or imagine the word. Now this doesn't mean that music positively guarantee's recall but it can help improve it. When actually taking the test it is helpful to hear the same music played again. Listening to music can also aid you in depression, anxiety, or excessive worrying. When you have one orall of these problems your brains working power is hampered, as well as its reasoning ability. What is happening on a scientific level is that your brain is experiencing reduced levels of serotonin. Music affects a steep rise in levels of se
ratonin, which has positive effects on brain cells controlli
ng mood,sexual desires, memory power, learning, sleep, memory functions and more. (http://www.buzzle.com/articles/how-does-music-affect-the-brain.html)
(http://www.cerebromente.org.br/n15/mente/musica.html)

So listening to music can definitely affect the brain and we can all feel the effects when listening to our favorite songs or even when we get stuck at a show listening to a band we really
dislike; but what is even more interesting, is how music affects the brain not when we listen to it but when we are playing an instrument. Scientists have been working on a very controlled two year study in which they take a group of kids and follow there brain and cognitive development as the children begin to study
music. Initially all the children's cognitive levels were the same however after one year the children who had been musically trained showed great improvement in manual dexterity, music perception skills, and verbal and mathematic skills. There research also showed that nine to eleven year old's who received three to four years of music training did significantly outperformed a control group (in mathematics and vocabulary) who didn't receive music training. (http://www.dana.org/grants/imaging/detail.aspx?id=4712) I feel as though it is obvious from the research that playing an instrument significantly increases your cognitive ability. What amazes me is how important to learning music training is and yet we take it out of all the schools.I hope the research helps bring music back to public schools. Music and Studying


Music has an incredibly powerful impact on the human mind. It has the power and ability to influence moods, calm nerves, excite senses and even evoke within us emotional responses. Our brains are able detect melodies, rhythms and beats. It is no mystery why it is referred to as the universal language of the world. Parents are encouraged to expose their children to classical music at a young age to stimulate and increase learning potential. As an artist, I recognize music as playing a crucial role in my creative process. I may hear a song of any era and genre randomly play on my iPod and suddenly rich visual images that otherwise would not be there begin surfacing. Music inspires our mind to reach great heights. Having such a powerful influence over mind and body, how exactly does music affect a student’s ability to concentrate? A study conducted by doctor Laurence O’Donnell entitled,Music and the Brain detected classical music, specifically from the baroque period causes our heart beat as well as pulse rate to relax to the beat of the music. Once relaxed, she claims that the mind is more capable of concentration. In contrast, physician and psychiatrist, Dr John Diamond conducted experiments leading to direct connections between music and muscle reaction. Diamond’s
research shows that muscle weaken when subjected to music with harsh beats such as punk rock, hard rock and Hip Hop and may very well prevent clear and concise concentration. What regions of the brain does music effect? The researchers found that after 15 months the instrumental students performed much better
in the near transfer domains, even though both groups of students performed equally well at “baseline”—before instruction began. In addition to the battery of cognitive tests, the researchers performed brain scans on the children using diffusion tensor imaging, which can map the brain’s connective white matter. The scans revealed strengthened connections in musically relevant auditory and motor areas of the brain among those students who had received 15 months of training, compared with the nonmusic group. These changes correlated with the children’s behavioral improvements. http://www.dana.org/news/braininthenews/detail.aspx?id=21764
Playing music effects the brain. The research shows relationship to mathematics and improvements on the connections in the brain.Posner's search also includes brains network and attention and ability to focus on a a task. Dr Dean Shibata, assistant professor of radiology at the University of Washington, has found that deaf people sense musical vibrations in the part of the brain other people use for hearing. These musical vibrations are, he believes, likely to be "every bit as real" as actually hearing the sounds. Dr Shibata told the 87th Scientific Assembly and Annual Meeting of the Radiological Society of North America, in Chicago, that deaf people and those with hearing may have similar experiences when they listen to music. "These findings suggest that the experience deaf people have when 'feeling' music is similar to the experience other people have when hearing music"

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/1678419.stm

The effects of music vibrations can still be processed in the same part of the brain a normal person would.Technology uses its ways for deaf people to enjoy and take advantage of music. Study shows music will give brain activity and auditory cortex. The researchers found that professional musicians showed greater responses to the tones than non-musicians. Amateurs were somewhere in between. They then used brain imaging techniques to measure the size of Heschl's gyrus and found it was larger in professional musicians. They had 130% more grey matter in the part of the brain that makes sense of music compared with people who were not musical. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/2044646.stm

Overall the brain will react to music, cognitive development, brain networks brain function and influences. The studies are proving the importance of music and ability of music are in our daily life. Music and Memory

Do you sometime wish that you have better memory, whether you are learning a new language or just trying to remember a phone number? A popular opinion is that music can enhance or aid people’s memory. Researches show that music can helpboth short and long term memory, even in Alzheimer’s patients. An ongoing study by a UK-based team from the University of Leeds involves inviting people to recount a memory that relates to the Beatles. The results show that “the recounted memories are almost always positive, that people remember particular episodes very vividly - sounds, smells and sights of the memory were often recounted”. Study at University of Michigan found that a group of musically trained college-aged participants had better scores in long-term verbal memory compared to a similar group of non-musician controls, but this difference disappeared when the musicians were prevented from rehearsing. Another ongoing study conducted by scientists from Boston College, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and Harvard Medical School found that “controlled training on attention-related tasks increased the effectiveness of the attention network and also improved far transfer domains. When children were given training sessions specifically designed to improve attention, not only did attention improve, but also generalized parts of intelligence related to fluid intelligence and IQ increased.”

A small study conducted by neurologist at Boston University shows that “Alzheimer’s patients who were put through a series of memory tests learned more lyrics when they were set to music rather than just spoken, while healthy elderly people remembered just as much and just as well with or without music”.

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