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🗓️ 19 March 2015
⏱️ 2 minutes
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0:00.0 | This is Scientific American 60 Second Science. |
0:04.0 | I'm Andrew Alfano. Got a minute? |
0:07.0 | Just the sounds of the 1960 movie thriller Psycho may be enough to get your heart racing. |
0:14.0 | Even when we may not be aware of it, hearing music can affect our bodies as well as our minds. |
0:19.0 | But are the physiological effects of music unique to one culture or are they more general? |
0:24.6 | To find out, researchers enlisted 40 Canadians from downtown Montreal and 40 pygmies from the Congo |
0:30.1 | rainforest. All the volunteers listen to musical clips from the movie's Psycho Star all the As the participants listened, the researchers observed their emotional reactions, as well as psychophysiological responses like changes in heart rate, breathing rate, and palm sweat production. |
0:51.0 | The two groups disagreed about whether a particular musical selection was happy or sad, |
0:55.9 | but they all had similar levels of arousal as measured by their psychophysiological responses. |
1:01.2 | These findings suggest that some aspects of how we react to music are |
1:04.6 | universal rather than strictly cultural. The study is in the journal |
1:08.4 | Frontiers in Psychology. Fundamental acoustical features including tempo, pitch, and timbre seem to be responsible for the similar responses of the Canadians and the Congolese pygmies. |
1:18.0 | Does that finding mean that science can help create the world's most universally infectious pop song? |
1:23.2 | On that front, science may be behind for L Williams. |
1:26.2 | Thanks for the minute. |
1:30.2 | For Scientific American 60 Second Science, I'm Andrea Alfano. |
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