What sort of physical, cognitive impact does listening to music have on your brain?
it not only strengthens preexisting connections but builds new ones as well, and if the volume is high enough you can at least in my experience cross entire centers of activity and create or use connections that result in types of synesthesia. so it's probably more important than you think if it can involve the fusing of lobes.
>>8779875
>if the volume is high enough
wtf did he mean by this?
how do you go about using music to create and/or strengthen connections that are relevant outside of music listening?
all I've heard about music so far is a memeish study that it affects your dopamine levels in a manner similar to a heroin high
I find it relaxing, and so I take breaks and listen to stuff. Take some nice songs:
Oligarkh - Forgive Us
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=HyImgF-1NPw
S U R F I N G - Moonlight
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=1Srh3iPZBVY
Yung Bae - Fly With Me
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=lmKvpq76dQ8
>>8779799
bump for later
I hear if you listen to neuro beats you grow a vagina.
Jungle music is best music. Prove me wrong.
>>8781178
>im a little bitch
Listening to music lets me focus on one thing if I'm doing nothing instead. If I know the music well, my thoughts will wander, but if it's newish, I can focus entirely on it and pick out all the different elements.
I lost my headphones a couple of months ago and bus journeys became extremely irritating
dopamine highs, especially when it is personally impressionable to you
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1CtQAKJzDFs
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4S8Ul2jqTqA
Depending on the music and your taste, listening to it might be helpfull for certain tasks that require a lot and long concentration, but not all of your concentration. An example where it helps is texing a paper or preparing lectures, a counterexample is actual research, like "doing" new math.