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Radio "hits" deliver long term brain damage
Radio "hits" deliver long term brain damage
CHICAGO Fri Nov 12, 2010 8:09am EDT (Reuters) HEALTH Researchers at the University of Nijmegen report today that sustained exposure to certain musical structures through headphones may, in as few as five years, shrink soft cartilaginous tissues of the outer ear and weaken craniofacial nerves. For 3% of test subjects, the effect is accompanied by slight deformation of the sinus cavity and neurasthenia within the prefrontal cortex. Scientists believe the condition correlates significantly to a documented rise in musical homogeneity since 1985, an effect sociologists have attributed to the inability of audiences to dislodge aesthetic taste from narrow and repetitive conventions of popular music. The study has been funded as part of renewed efforts to investigate the role of socio-economic, cultural, and even aesthetic factors in human epigenetics. The multidisciplinary research team at the University of Nijmegen includes political scientists, anthropologists and ethnomusicologists. In their report, the team describes lax enforcement against payola radio; a statistical analysis of radio playlists reveal that a handful of songs on heaviest rotation have not changed in more than forty years. The tendency to cling to outdated artistic forms as evidenced by the persistence of "hit music" in popular culture since 1965 is what led the Nijmegen researchers to investigate the possibility of attendant physical effects. "We found a significant neurasthenic effect. Apparently, listening to Hotel California three thousand times doesn't just suck, it can actually cave-in the head and debilitate the prefrontal cortex." Martin Ledwick, head nurse on the research team, said in a statement. "Think of it as an injury, a kind of plantar fasciitis, the equivalent of shin splints caused by traipsing endlessly over one musical terrain." Dr. Emil DeMaris, professor of Psychoacoustics, presented the group's findings at a conference in Rotterdam. "Our species is perhaps poorly described as Homo Sapiens. We are in many ways a herd species, led astray by a willingness to conform to social stability so long as basic needs of food, shelter and clothing have been met. This social behavioral fact makes human beings particularly susceptible to the numbing effects of cultural homogeneity. The danger to humans is no different than domesticating other species; a herd of wild caribou survives in the shifting environment of arctic tundra, but slowly perishes in the stultifying terrarium environment, a Habi-trail, either for caribou or humans is a tool of genocide. We have been dangerously slow to detect the equivalent tools wielded in corporate advertising culture today." By focusing on contemporary art and popular music, DeMaris said his team sought to improve on "the myopia of the microscope" which passes for scientific method today. "The assumption that humans are ruled by logic, long discredited in economics and political science, persists today as the facile foundation of too many scientific disciplines." The report, to be published in the Journal of Psychoacoustics, concludes that human faculties of reason and perception are engaged most fully by experiences that are unnerving, confounding, and even terrifying. Pressed by reporters to explain whether and how science should arbitrate aesthetic and cultural tastes, DeMaris explained that his team took an "anything but Top 40" approach and had found many contemporary artists actively developing radically new aesthetics. Study participants introduced to recordings from a new musical group called Nerfbau showed high brain function in the amygdala, the part of the brain responsible for fight or flight responses which are known to heighten acuity of perception. The researchers also cite facial expressions of anguish, horror, surprise, and amazement as responsible for the attendant strengthening of craniofacial nerves rooted to the outer ear. Such phenomena were present in fewer than .01% of control subjects who were more likely to exhibit slack facial expressions when exposed to music from the VH1 Classics playlist. Members of the band Nerfbau were contacted for comment via their record label, Resipiscent. Responding by phone and only through voice masking software, one band member was quoted as saying, "Blood builds your smiles from loose screams." |
This provides some explanation for Glice
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You're a proper bellend, aren't you eh? More seriously, it doesn't quite discern between what the formal structures are, and whether or not it's repetition itself; that is, is it the 'aesthetic' 'quality' of the music or the repetition; viz, does someone listening exclusively to anything repeatedly damage them, or is there something specific to the music since the mid-80s? I don't think mid-80s music is necessarily any better or worse 'aesthetically' or structurally speaking than anything since the 30s, but I wonder if this article isn't getting at the sense that modern media tends to dote upon repetition and hegemony over diversity and plurality. |
I agree with what glice said
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So what you're saying is that I should listen to every record only once?
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It says the report is to be published in the journal of psychoacoustics, so maybe a more full description of the study can be found there, can you use your stude privileges to access that online?
Although it wouldn't surprise me if this article is a hoax as I saw it posted on a noise mailing list but when I searched for it on Reuters I couldn't find it, and when I typed the headline into google I only got about 8 results. |
the pr is better than the music
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Does look to be bollocks - nothing on Reuters from that day. BUT. It does seem the sort of thing that Nijmegen would do. I'll have a proper look later if I can be arsed.
http://improbable.com/ig/ig-pastwinners.html |
it's probably a hoax but it's a good one.
Apparently, listening to Hotel California three thousand times doesn't just suck, it can actually cave-in the head and debilitate the prefrontal cortex. lol |
Music snobbery now has scientific backing. Cute.
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It does read like a hoax.
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it's totally made up shit, i thought it was from the onion
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It's not so much snobbery as anti-homogeneity |
and what about soundfrequencies to chase away 'problematic' youth?
is it also some sort of 'evil'-sidekick experiment on humans and then they have thier psycho analitic reseach to enforce their control on people? |
wait i have this invented this spray
pppsshhhhhhhhhhhh ppppsssssssssssssshhhhhhhhhhhh 'scandal ' a new frequence by the youth of tommorow |
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However, he's a rather sensitive chap about such things and his life, in general, isn't the most optimistic it could be. |
Didn't atsonicpark post this in another thread?
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Anyways. It's an interesting article.
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haaa haaa haaaa people! |
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'Article' - same root as artifice, artificial, artistic [etc] surely? |
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