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2007-03-02 16:41:35 · 4 answers · asked by Bug Catcher 3 in Health Other - Health

4 answers

The Mozart effect
Music may tune up your thinking, but you can't just crank up the volume and expect to become a genius

A DECADE ago Frances Rauscher, a psychologist now at the University of Wisconsin at Oshkosh, and her colleagues made waves with the discovery that listening to Mozart improved people's mathematical and spatial reasoning. Even rats ran mazes faster and more accurately after hearing Mozart than after white noise or music by the minimalist composer Philip Glass. Last year, Rauscher reported that, for rats at least, a Mozart piano sonata seems to stimulate activity in three genes involved in nerve-cell signalling in the brain.

This sounds like the most harmonious way to tune up your mental faculties. But before you grab the CDs, hear this note of caution. Not everyone who has looked for the Mozart effect has found it. What's more, even its proponents tend to think that music boosts brain power simply because it makes listeners feel better - relaxed and stimulated at the same time - and that a comparable stimulus might do just as well. In fact, one study found that listening to a story gave a similar performance boost.

There is, however, one way in which music really does make you smarter, though unfortunately it requires a bit more effort than just selecting something mellow on your iPod. Music lessons are the key. Six-year-old children who were given music lessons, as opposed to drama lessons or no extra instruction, got a 2 to 3-point boost in IQ scores compared with the others. Similarly, Rauscher found that after two years of music lessons, pre-school children scored better on spatial reasoning tests than those who took computer lessons.

Maybe music lessons exercise a range of mental skills, with their requirement for delicate and precise finger movements, and listening for pitch and rhythm, all combined with an emotional dimension. Nobody knows for sure. Neither do they know whether adults can get the same mental boost as young children. But, surely, it can't hurt to try.

2007-03-02 17:09:57 · answer #1 · answered by crazywhitegirl 2 · 0 0

I've heard that listening to classical music without words can release things within your mind. It relaxes you and I'd imagine can actually make you more smarter. Not REALLY smart mind you, but to a certain degree, yes.

2007-03-02 16:51:03 · answer #2 · answered by Deedlit79 2 · 0 1

yes you learn new words from it

2007-03-02 16:45:14 · answer #3 · answered by Answerer 4 · 0 1

yea, i heard that classical does

2007-03-02 16:46:32 · answer #4 · answered by Ash 2 · 0 1

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