Hello Doctors, I was looking for background music to study, and I found this interesting info that I think that is very usefull to people that wants improve their study time. Here are topics that i considered that are important. To get more information: Music and the brain .
yeah!, me too, mostly soft music like Kitaro,Mozart or balades Actually I'm Dra_Mon, is good that you like it
I usually listen to some classical music or Norah Jones or Ana Nalick when I study, but some friends do manage to concentrate even with Metallica playing in the background.
funny someone talking about music here to be honest, i'm a huge fan of music. maybe a little bit more hardcore than other music fans, i like to buy a quality headphone, headphone amplifier, recabled it, etc. (for references, cek head-fi.org/forum) are anyone familiar with the term eargasm? urban dictionary defines , maybe this sounds weird. but sometimes, my body is in a state that enjoys music more than i usually does its kind of hard to explain it in words, it feels ecstasic. each my body is enjoying every little detail that the music offers and this does not limit to classical music. i sometimes switch between a concerto, folk song , pop song, or anything that i feel like listening. when i'm at this state, i hear every little details that i dont normally hears. like a flute player taking a big breath, a little glockenspiel playing off the background, or sometimes the sound of finger sliding gently on the fretboard of the guitar. every second seems precious and priceless. normally when im having an eargasm, i just lay down with the light off. just lying on the bed with the headphone on my ear, sometimes my hand moves following the beat, gasp, or the small details in the music.( im sure if people see's me moving my hand and feet , they must've think i'm seriously weird and freaky). last time i had an eargasm, it last for 4 whole hours. the point is it feels really ecstasic, blissfull, and i dont think i can explain it correctly using words. if some other audiophiles are here, do proof/deny my point here currently my hypothesis is that it have something to do with endorphine (Because it feels so blissful). and i dont have any point at all to supports my hypothesis. lol, im still a 1st year student. if anyone wondering, currently my earphone setup is a 4-years old AKG K412p [around 40$] (oh, and headphone gets better as they are used often. the process is called burn-in) recabled with some canare cables and a hippo amp [70$]. an ipod and the song has 128 or 312 bit rate/s in it. (mostly 312) . based on the price of my headphone and amplifier, both are middle class sound equipment. P.S: i read a journal somewhere about music for alzheimer treatment. is it okay to post journal here? and i cant study with music .heheh
@ Edoreza You seem to be music expert not doctor I post alot here with writing the source of the article