Music on the Brain: Jessica Grahn at TEDxWaterloo 2013

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  • Опубликовано: 28 дек 2024

Комментарии • 86

  • @kyraocity
    @kyraocity 5 лет назад +14

    11:37 Motor areas respond even without movement; rhythm is driving music even without music
    13:30 Music is not just about sound, it is also *fundamentally* about movement

  • @joemcg0241
    @joemcg0241 6 лет назад +12

    This topic has been the most interesting thing on earth to me! And then I find this! Whaaat! Great job

  • @ElieATALLAH
    @ElieATALLAH 5 лет назад +5

    I cried at the end ..much love and thank you for sharing this ❤
    So Music can really make miracles

  • @DJKoollord
    @DJKoollord 7 лет назад +10

    For musicians that have used a metronome, this video made a lot of sense.

    • @nickscoiattolo3428
      @nickscoiattolo3428 6 лет назад

      For musicians that eat peanuts is even butter. Better, sorry. Better.

  • @JacobLouis
    @JacobLouis 2 года назад

    I love you! Finally someone understands my taste in music. Rhythm is so important!

  • @CariFromDitchDiets
    @CariFromDitchDiets 7 лет назад +1

    Music’s powerful healing force

  • @anarchyjt809
    @anarchyjt809 3 года назад +5

    The audience whenever the Jessica makes a joke: 3:23

  • @amusicment4829
    @amusicment4829 Год назад

    Great talk, thank you!

  • @Stormeyworld
    @Stormeyworld 9 лет назад +13

    Very interesting. The brain is amazing!

  • @dlxinfinite7098
    @dlxinfinite7098 3 года назад

    This is one of the best, easily digestible video on this topic

  • @JussiTuukkanen
    @JussiTuukkanen 5 лет назад +1

    thank you

  • @mdk_millenial
    @mdk_millenial 9 лет назад +1

    great .. loved it

  • @drkittyrathod
    @drkittyrathod 4 года назад

    Incredible talk

  • @carol8434
    @carol8434 7 лет назад +70

    What a bad audience..

  • @26wavessoundscape86
    @26wavessoundscape86 7 лет назад

    after 20 tedx videos i watched this is probably the most cool

  • @hsy9.423
    @hsy9.423 5 лет назад +3

    its very very informative i am glad i am watching this on may 30 2019!!!

  • @MrAkshay8opeth
    @MrAkshay8opeth 7 лет назад +74

    she's speaking in front of corpses.

  • @thesaiyanpath7914
    @thesaiyanpath7914 6 лет назад +1

    I'm in love with her.

  • @charlesedwards7115
    @charlesedwards7115 2 года назад

    As of yet i have noy come across music Therapy for thoes people with Mental Health problems can you do a lecture on such

  • @leekei5929
    @leekei5929 4 года назад +4

    12:20 I could acknowledge I will never make bilboard on top 100 ( and laughs at herself)
    Audiences: 😐😐😐😐😐😐

  • @infinaneek
    @infinaneek 8 лет назад +38

    Oh god. The audience were worse than the money!

  • @ciarafahy9162
    @ciarafahy9162 8 лет назад +3

    Mendelssohns violin concerto in e minor op.64 if anyone was wondering😄

  • @ayatarek5
    @ayatarek5 9 лет назад +1

    Extremely nice : ]

  • @Tyrog
    @Tyrog 11 лет назад +1

    Very interesting!

  • @ColletteandBren
    @ColletteandBren 4 года назад +3

    god...that audience

  • @billwesley
    @billwesley 8 лет назад +13

    Animals use a sense of rhythm to walk, run, fly, slither, swim, jump, bounce, lope, gallop, swing, climb, descend, turn, twist. dive, fight, hit, throw, grasp, push, pull, chew, swallow howl, breath, hiss and perform every other action involving muscles. If they did not have an expert sense of timing they could do none of these things. Humans move together but so do many animals such a birds in mating dances predators coordinating a hunt and so on. Most animals do not respond to human music because they are not human, but many probobly could if need be.

    • @iam1smiley1
      @iam1smiley1 5 лет назад

      I've used music to work with dressage horses that lacked rhythm...it worked very well!!
      I've also used music to calm jorses that were tense and used music to excite lazy horses.
      I also have a Jack Russell terrier who lives to "sing" to Shania Twain. Sparkie definently has favorite songs that he likes to sing to more than others 🤣

  • @grantusguitar1269
    @grantusguitar1269 4 года назад +1

    The audience did not have that beat down

  • @MrMari0000
    @MrMari0000 5 лет назад +2

    the monkey was tapping on the upbeat

  • @weneedmorerain
    @weneedmorerain 9 лет назад +4

    A fast techno best? It's like 120bpm generally. DnB anyone? 174, or drum step sometimes at 180

    • @ix_9_ix
      @ix_9_ix 8 лет назад +1

      Nah brutal death metal 200 bpm

  • @tanteastrid3419
    @tanteastrid3419 6 лет назад +2

    The bird is a Sulfur crested COCKATOO. The speaker said incorrect cockatiel.

    • @triple8ball
      @triple8ball 4 года назад

      Tante Astrid I did her best

  • @bjrnvindabildtrup9337
    @bjrnvindabildtrup9337 8 лет назад

    You don't have to be fully synchronized to dance to something, the important thing I think, is if the music makes snowball move like that because it likes the sound of it so much, then it's dancing. If it is a spontaneous stimuli to the particular sound, then it's dancing (whether it's "music" in the traditional sense or not btw). If it moves like that to get a treat or something then it's fake, but you could maybe argue that some people do the same, use dance as a means to an end, like getting intimate with someone, and they wouldn't really want to dance if they could be free, that dance is also fake.

    • @robery81
      @robery81 8 лет назад

      My guess is that you dance because it feels good, hence you're getting a reward, ergo your dancing is fake. I really think you're a little bit confused about the psychological concepts of reward, value, and motivation. There's no such thing as doing some voluntary action, any voluntary action, just because. Freedom lies on doing whatever you want, it does not matter what the reason is: doing that for a treat, money, social interaction, sex, a long term goal, or just because you like it, makes no difference at all.
      Besides, what she's talking about is the ability to do something... humans may want to fly, we can even try, but we cannot, even if we find it rewarding. And we most certainly could not fly to get a reward, a treat or whatever. We may try 'just' to get a reward, but how well could we do?

    • @bjrnvindabildtrup9337
      @bjrnvindabildtrup9337 8 лет назад

      maybe I shouldn't have used the word "fake". I think maybe my point was that many humans' ways of dancing, to fit in, to get laid or whatever, are just as "fake" as the bird dancing to get a treat. I think there's a difference between enjoying the activity itself, it gives you an instant reward, and doing the activity like a chore to get some reward in the future. I think you can definitely do something just because, in a certain sense. Of course there's always a reason behind it, but some things you do to fit in, and you maybe kind of learn to enjoy them, cause of what goes along with it. Some other things, you just like doing, even if they are not really of any help in your life, and if you were alone you would maybe just do these things by your self. Maybe it's kind of an inner reward you get from these things, and other things that give you validation from other people, is an outer reward.
      I don't think I understood your point about humans flying. haven't seen the video in a while, maybe that's why...

  • @cucciolo182
    @cucciolo182 9 лет назад +1

    wow.

  • @sciencetroll3208
    @sciencetroll3208 8 лет назад +1

    That's not a 'Sulphour crested Cokateal ', that's a white cokatoo.

  • @azimchoudhury502
    @azimchoudhury502 6 лет назад +1

    What if I have a music addiction?

  • @chillosophy2886
    @chillosophy2886 8 лет назад

    Holy mother damn, I'm in love.

  • @WayamaGwandana
    @WayamaGwandana 5 лет назад +1

    Have a look at Paul Barton playing Bach on piano for a blind elephant on youtube.. elephants dance!

  • @sciencetroll3208
    @sciencetroll3208 8 лет назад +2

    I didn't hear you saying anything about blue whales having a top 40 of songs ?

  • @tommytwomommy
    @tommytwomommy 9 лет назад +10

    0:52 weakkk

  • @RancidTacoGas
    @RancidTacoGas 9 лет назад +1

    Aphex Twin!

  • @nickscoiattolo3428
    @nickscoiattolo3428 6 лет назад

    Musiq affects the brain the way the brain affects the music, meaning THAT:
    if you feel free, go with it, you enjoy life as long as it's green, and GRASS IS ALWAYS GREENER so
    this is poetry as far as musik is.. love. or life. everything.? dammn. i'ì,'m confused. No, i'm not.
    MUSIC IS LOVE

  • @dsprtly
    @dsprtly 7 лет назад

    hey aphex!!!

  • @julietheadrick3699
    @julietheadrick3699 7 лет назад +1

    I wonder if music has the same energizing effect on depression?

    • @roxanajohnson9310
      @roxanajohnson9310 6 лет назад +1

      Juliet Headrick it does.

    • @lukasziel.5434
      @lukasziel.5434 6 лет назад

      I don't think so... Sure, it can be energizing, but as depression is a severe mental disorder and the patients oftentimes feel a lack of drive and avolution, it can differ. As I myself have depression I have to say, that it's not uncommon for the brain to hesitate or even reject the sound of something, that others may find energizing. Kind of the same, as if you were listening to a song that you don't like but were forced to listen to it. It is known and proven that music can trigger dopamine release in the brain, but this is solely responsible for joy and not for drive and motivation. As for example when listening to a well liked piece of music a person with depressive disorder may be soothed and relieved in a certain way, as the dopamine release can lessen the feeling often experienced numbness, but it oftentimes won't energize the person so much to do something or in the most severe cases to even get out of bed. That is because the hormone responsible for drive is serotonin, which isn't majorly released by listening to music. Therefore music in case of a major depressive disorder is unlikely to energize to a certain degree, though it can lessen emotional symptoms

  • @worldwarmickMiceal
    @worldwarmickMiceal 9 лет назад +1

    Aphex Twin yeeee

  • @RaraAvisRenascor
    @RaraAvisRenascor 7 лет назад

    I wonder what someone’s brain scan would look like listening to V-Snares

  • @ANILKUMAR-ic1ms
    @ANILKUMAR-ic1ms 6 лет назад

    How about motor impulse in people listening to sarrow song

  • @mrvaskokurko
    @mrvaskokurko 8 лет назад

    I wished she danced, she's cuuute.

  • @RandomParrot
    @RandomParrot 5 лет назад

    I could be a great example for her of a human that can't move accurately to music. I make snowball look like Ringo Starr....wait That may be a bad example..LOL

  • @Bengun67
    @Bengun67 6 лет назад

    ANGUS YOUNG ! ! ! lol

  • @gracemarcantel9052
    @gracemarcantel9052 4 года назад +1

    Gee, maybe it's because we're NOT from monkeys?!?!

  • @igaboa2486
    @igaboa2486 5 лет назад

    Why you all forget about: SOUNDS of WORDS VIBRATIONS from ELECTROMAGNETIC AIRFIELDS: GOOD OR BAD? MUSIC is HEALING: YES, BUT IF IS MIXED WITH BAD WORDS FROM DIFFERENT HARMONY OF WORDS VIBRATIONS: IT BECAME: DISEASED CLOUDS RADIATION of DEADLY FORCE ON PEOPLE BRAINS and BODIES. WORDS OF POETRY HAVE MELODY WITHIN, as "SPRING SUNNY BUTTERFLY'S DANCE", YET NONE IS TEACHING ABOUT IT> WHY?

  • @sciencetroll3208
    @sciencetroll3208 8 лет назад

    Wrong. Rythym is not the basic thing in music. The basic thing is painting a picture. A painter uses perspective, colour, shade, contrast, edges, movement . . . . . .and yes, look at the Mona Lisa, her smile moves . . . .I am a musician, all this shit is what we do.

  • @manuelalejandrochavezcasti1476
    @manuelalejandrochavezcasti1476 8 лет назад

    Wow! She's hot ! Heeeeeeeey now Jessy!

  • @followerofjesus6338
    @followerofjesus6338 5 лет назад

    You can have everlasting life by repenting toward God and believing in Jesus Christ our Lord and Saviour and you will be saved ❤️💕 Jesus died for our sins got buried and rose again

  • @surfinmuso37
    @surfinmuso37 8 лет назад +5

    She actually shows and proves very little, if anything at all. Training a monkey through a reward system to respond to a beat says nothing about humans and music. Just proves how stupid the methods of "neuroscientists" are.

    • @robery81
      @robery81 8 лет назад +1

      Wow, you're smart! Come on genius, do something good for humanity and remove your genes from gene pool. If enough geniouses like you do the same, perhaps neuroscientists of the future will use less dumb methods.

    • @surfinmuso37
      @surfinmuso37 8 лет назад +2

      If only u were "genious" enough to be able to use spell check. Move on simpleton u are over yr head.

    • @robery81
      @robery81 8 лет назад +1

      +Great zombie jesus A "genius" who spells "genius" as "genious" is most definitely not a genius. Use a dictionary and read more "genious".

    • @surfinmuso37
      @surfinmuso37 8 лет назад

      Can't even come up with yr own insults mr 'tard. Go back to kindergarten-leave the thinking to the adults.

    • @robery81
      @robery81 8 лет назад +1

      +Great zombie jesus Oh my! This is worse than I thought. But you know, there are options for people with the type of cognitive impairment you have. Get professional help Mr. Adult, you don't have to live with a disability. Won't reply anymore, I don't have time to waste because I am actually trying to do something beneficial for mankind.

  • @hankwilson741
    @hankwilson741 4 года назад

    Snore

  • @sciencetroll3208
    @sciencetroll3208 8 лет назад

    How do you know about an Orca's response to music ? Have you sung with them ? I suggest you go and sing with Orcas before you authoritevely tell H Sapiens about " animals " response to music.