Posted on 05/26/2005 9:05:34 PM PDT by InShanghai
If the song "It's a Small World" has ever driven you bananas, then you've got an idea where this story is going.
We've all had tunes stuck in our heads. Some of them remind us of childhood friends, places or events.
A new study backs the obvious notion that a song can evoke strong memories. It also reveals that you don't even have to hear a song for the past to come flooding back.
In fact, most people have an amazing ability to effectively hear songs that aren't even being played.
Word power
The new study involved 124 people, average age 19, who were asked to choose from a list of old songs and pick the one that evoked the strongest memory. One group just saw the title, another saw the lyrics, the third saw the album cover or a photo of the artist. A fourth group heard a snippet of the song.
The participants ranked the vividness of their memories.
The recollections were extremely clear for each group, said researcher Elizabeth Cady. "Music is a big cue," she concludes.
Cady, a doctoral student in psychology at Kansas State University, cites the study as evidence for the pervasiveness of mass media, noting that many of the participants' memories were the same as her own.
The results will be presented this week at the American Psychological Society meeting in Los Angeles.
Driving you nuts
You can test the power of song titles right now. But beware, one of these could ruin your day:
These ditties, along with "Small World," were cited in a 2001 study by James Kellaris at the University of Cincinnati as among the most common that get stuck in peoples' heads.
Kellaris found that 99 percent of the 1,000 people he surveyed reported having songs lodged in their noggins. Nearly half said it happens frequently.
A simple song with lots of repetition and an unexpected shift is among the most likely to bedevil you, Kellaris says. Down the road, it creates a "cognitive itch" -- the thing that might bug you all day today (after all).
"The only way to 'scratch' a cognitive itch is to rehearse the responsible tune mentally," Kellaris said. "The process may start involuntarily, as the brain detects an incongruity or something 'exceptional' in the musical stimulus. The ensuing mental repetition may exacerbate the 'itch,' such that the mental rehearsal becomes largely involuntary, and the individual feels trapped in a cycle or feedback loop."
All in the lyrics
Scientists are beginning to figure out what's behind the insanity. A study earlier this year used brain scans to reveal that musical memories are stored in the brain's auditory cortex. It also showed that you continue to hear a familiar song in our head when the music stops playing.
"We played music in the scanner, and then we hit a virtual 'mute' button," explained David Kraemer, a graduate student in Dartmouth's Psychological and Brain Sciences Department. "We found that people couldn't help continuing the song in their heads, and when they did this, the auditory cortex remained active even though the music had stopped."
The study was reported in the March 10 issue of the journal Nature.
"It's fascinating that although the ear isn't actually hearing the song, the brain is perceptually hearing it," said co-author William Kelley, assistant professor of psychological and brain sciences at Dartmouth.
The researchers were surprised to find a difference in how we recall songs with words versus instrumentals.
When the mute button was hit during the word-free theme from the Pink Panther (sorry to do that again) people relied on many different parts of the auditory cortex to fill in the blanks. Fewer brain parts were required to continue "hearing" songs with words.
"It makes us think that lyrics might be the focus of the memory," Kraemer said.
Once again, I couldn't help but remember all the Freeepers who post song lyrics and musical satire.
Enjoy!
PS: I'm at work and I could only come up with this one:
I've been working on the raaailroad,
allll the live long daayyy.
I've been working on the raailroad....
I've got "I Can't Get It Out Of My Head" in my head.
Mr. Softee, . . what is that song?
Kim Jong Il's song in 'Team America' has been following me around all day.
Songs are strong, but smells are stronger.
You beat me to it.
Smells are recognized DEEP in the brain. Very powerful.
I wish I was an Oscar Meyer weiner... and My bologna has a first name, It's O-S-C-A-R...
Sorry. LOL!
If not for the fact that this "song" is played dozens of times per sporting event in virtually every stadium in the country every single day of the year, it wouldn't be that offensive.
But it is, so it is.
I guess that's what teams think fans want to hear, probably because "everybody else plays it."
The "Oompa Loompa" song from Willie Wonka and the Chocolate Factory is pretty sticky too.
I have a now 12 year old daughter, so naturally I remember....
this is the song that never ends
yes it goes on and on my friends.....
(sorry 'bout that)
oh my gosh....now I got it in mine.
lol
I am trying to download the pink panther theme...not much luck though.
I hope our tax dollars didn't go for this study that proves what everyone has known for CENTURIES!
I'm so ronry.
duh
duh duh
duh duh, duh duh, duh duh, duh duh duduhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhuh, duhduhduhdu
duh
duh duh
duh duh, duh duh, duh duh, duh duh duhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhuh, duhduhduhdu
Ah, I found the theme and downloaded it. I love that song. Now I will have it in my head for a week, alternated with I'm So Ronery and You are Worthless Alec Baldwin.
My Sharona ping ...
I bought these stupid Christmas lights at Wal-Mart that played music and flashed the lights to the "words." Long after I turned them off, I could still hear them playing in my mind.
It almost ruined me.
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