| What effect does classical music have on the nervous system?

What effect does classical music have on the nervous system?

Rebecca Jordan asked the question:


I am doing a science project on this topic - and whatever info or answers I get, help!! (So basically I’m just wondering what you think the effect of classical music is on the nervous system or what you do know about this. REMEMBER, your opinion helps…a lot!! -Thanks!

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Comments

12 Responses to “What effect does classical music have on the nervous system?”

  1. notmyself on January 31st, 2009 3:07 am

    relaxes me…

  2. Holy Lancer on February 2nd, 2009 1:26 am

    It makes your body turn inside out… Handle Classical Music with caution!

  3. wvtalbot on February 3rd, 2009 4:41 pm

    Honestly if it is a science project opinion means nothing. Science has to be verifiable and repeatable. Just lay out a classic experiment doing scientific method.

    For example hypothesize that classic music has a calming effect. Grab a sample of people and take their pulse before and after listening to the music. Record your results and viola. Simple.

  4. ticklemyflavor on February 6th, 2009 11:41 pm

    All music has rhythm. It is movement heard, felt, and seen. Listening to Mozart’s music and focusing on rhythm alone involves attention to complex elements that provide temporal cohesion in music and organizes and structures sounds in time. Rhythm embodies beat, pulse, accent, meter, duration, tempo, density, texture, form, and rhythmic patterns. If one were to listen to music with all these in mind, certainly the brain will be well stimulated. Yet musical elements go beyond rhythm to include melody, harmony, timbre, style, dynamics, meaning and emotion. Eurhythmics activates a feeling for music which, in Greek terms, includes dance and drama. A sense of order and balance is created internally, and imagination develops simultaneously. Such an approach to music education encompasses cognitive, affective, and psychomotor behaviors.

  5. kukukachooinyourface on February 9th, 2009 9:21 am

    Honestly classical music creeps out the hairs on the back of my neck …not all the time but sometimes …I cant explain it. Its probably the same feeling that a classical music fan would get from listening to deth metal…only reversed.

  6. Aliz-USA on February 12th, 2009 8:07 am

    Classical music calms me down when I am driving in heavy traffic. And is relaxing when I want to go to sleep.

  7. Blue Benz on February 13th, 2009 3:04 am

    I can only tell you that classical music completely gets on my NERVES. So I guess you could say it drives my nervous system crazy for crying out loud!

  8. maxmom on February 14th, 2009 6:27 am

    Soothing and meditative to wrenching and sad.

  9. SPHINX on February 15th, 2009 5:38 pm

    no effect at all, something called the “Mozart effect”, the supposed relaxation and concentration you think you feel when you listen to classical music is only temporary, about 7 mins. It does not make smarter at all, it is only a myth.

  10. Richard J on February 15th, 2009 7:03 pm

    Go to answers.com at search of site type effect of classical music on the nervous system . You get related links go through them.

  11. jalasian on February 16th, 2009 12:18 am

    Music is the common language of the world that everyone understands. Soothing soft classical music calms down the spirit which relaxes the material body and allows the mind to shed anxiety and the troubles that cause it. Large stores use music to put people in a good mood and people in a good mood spend more money. Research has proven it and that’s why so many public places use it.

  12. Devil's Queen on February 16th, 2009 4:02 pm

    I would think it would calm/relax the nerves