What kind of music should you listen to when learning or taking a test?

What kind of music should you listen to when learning or taking a test?

 

Click on the image for a larger version

 

This is a really fascinating study - it took me a while to work out and explain exactly what was going on - but bear with me - 'cos the results are super interesting.  This is from the Neuroaesthetics of Music Group up in Helsinki Finland.  73 subjects were tested using an FMRI to look at what's happening in the brain!

Click on the image to the left for a bigger version but I suggest you come back and look at it after reading the explanation underneath:


Three things you need to hold in your head:

 
Thing 1:

This is a basic learning test - where the subjects are presented with a pair of symbols and they are trained to select and remember the correct one.  They get three rounds of training and feedback is given with either a smiley or a frowny face.  After training, they are given a test and are scored on how many they get right.

 
Thing 2:

 
Before the testing, the subjects are given 14 pieces of music which they self select into 3 pieces of "neutral" music and 3 pieces of "pleasurable" music.  They also answer a series of questions about their personal musical experiences.

 
Thing 3:

 
This is the fun bit - while the subjects are doing the learning and the testing - they are being played either neutral music or pleasurable music (self identified remember?)  This enables the researchers to test the effect of different music types on learning behavior and to match it against musical experience - genius!
 
OK - so you've got those three things in your head - now let's look at the results.



Results


Seems that if you're someone with a lot of musical experience - you learn better when listening to neutral music - but you test better when listening to pleasurable music.
 
If you're less musical - you learn better with pleasurable music, but you test better with neutral music - the complete opposite.
 
That's pretty interesting!  The researchers propose that this is due to different listening strategies between the two groups which would make sense - but what does that mean?
 
I reckon that as a musician I'm naturally more attuned to devote mental resource to music than a non-musician and I'm likely to devote even more resource to music that I like.  So - when I'm learning something - when I'm forming neural pathways and connections - I want as much resource made available to me as possible - so - neutral music is better.  However - when I'm testing - which is more about recall and memory than it is about building - then I want to feel good - I want to juice my system - so - even though I might lose some resource by listening to music I like - I feel significantly better - which impacts and improves my test performance.
 
As a non-musician - the difference between resource allocated to neutral or pleasurable music is probably a lot less, so when it comes to learning - the "feel good" factor of pleasurable music seems to outweigh the  resource cost.  However - when it comes to testing - it might be that the resource cost of pleasurable music may become distracting and outweighs the feel good factor.


Who knows?


I think this kind of research and study is amazing and could lead to massive changes in how we learn and perform and the role of music within that process.  You go Helsinki!



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Written while listening to: God Knows Violas - Essay Writing Music

 

God Knows - Viola | Sami's Theme | Essay Writing Music

God Knows - Viola | Sami's Theme | Essay Writing Music

Written for Piano, Cello and Viola (that hard done to and under appreciated instrument,) this is the penultimate version of SAmi's theme.  Over the next month we will be working to develop and produce the Violin track but this version stood up so well on its own we thought we'd publish it anyway.

Written with essay writers in mind and people looking for music to write to - there are three distinct parts to the theme:

The first section is a very calm and gentle introduction to the overall piece.  When I'm first sitting down to produce something, I like to set the environment and I don't want to feel over stimulated or frenetic - I'm looking for calm and relaxed and considered - and that's what this section is all about.

The middle section is where the energy comes in - the piece starts resolving out of the rather melancholic and almost spooky beginning.  The ascendant themes resolving from major to minor are what I call idea catchers or perhaps even accelerators.  When I'm writing to this I often find my typing speeding up and the idea taking shape as I get to this part.

Finally there's the out - the ending - a complete theme change and back into a minor more delicate feel.  It's a very quiet and delicate section and can be used to reflect on what you just produced.  The piece ends almost unexpectedly, it leaves you hanging and wanting more, which is the perfect place to hit repeat and start all over again.

 


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And we're back - with The White House

And we're back - with The White House

Well that was one hell of a break!  Mexico feels like last decade, let a lone last year!  Anyway - even if we haven't been posting much, there has been plenty of musical development going on - expect a version of SAmi's theme with Cellos and Violas this coming Monday.

Minecraft

We have a couple of tracks up on YouTube in a Minecraft playlist: Design and Build that are slowly getting some traction.  I love to watch people building in Minecraft and the music was written while Jake was creating some crazy ass mansion.

When people comment on the track I often ask for a screenshot of what they built and this week's creation is a mini White House from fredomario2 - he was listening to Build as he built it - awesome!


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