Summary: A recent study reveals that music’s emotional impact transcends cultures, evoking similar bodily sensations globally. Researchers found that happy music energizes arms and legs, while sad tunes resonate in the chest.
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10 sats \ 1 reply \ @0xbitcoiner 31 Jan 2024
I would venture to say that it is the oldest art in the world, even older than painting. I don't have data to confirm what I say, but if I had to bet on the oldest art, I would bet on music. Thank you for sharing.
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10 sats \ 0 replies \ @ch0k1 OP 31 Jan 2024
You're welcome 😉
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0 sats \ 2 replies \ @987654321 31 Jan 2024
This is why watching commercials is best done without the volume.
The news programs of the M5M are full of emotional music, "nat pops" (natural sounds that may or may not actually belong to the story but are used for emotional response) and humans screaming, laughing... All psychological operations use sound of they can. User the mute button.
Another aspect about pop music is driven by simplistic beats that server the relationship of the two hemispheres of the brain and produce memories of things that never actually happened to you but are played over and over. The same production is with commercial music and jingles.
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10 sats \ 1 reply \ @ch0k1 OP 31 Jan 2024
WoW, what a coincidence .. I had the same strategy on how to treat ads/commercials when I was watching TV some years ago
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @987654321 31 Jan 2024
Yes in the 1990s I was watching TV with a friend and he reminded me that the remote, "has a mute button." With YouTube, now I can always hear him saying this. Thankfully my fire TV has a mute button that works on my TV.
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