Study Finds We Don’t Just Hear Music — Our Brains and Bodies “Become” It,
A recent study found what many of us know to be true: When we listen to music, we embody it on a deep, physical level that goes beyond hearing.
Drawing upon insights from neuroscience, music, and psychology, the study out of McGill University supports the neural resonance theory, which suggests that our brain and body’s oscillatory patterns align with a tune’s rhythm, melody, and harmony — “from the ear all the way to the spinal cord and limb movements.” These patterns help shape our musical preferences, sense of timing, and instincts to dance to the beat.
While other research has suggested that the brain relies on learned expectations and predictions to feel music, these findings present a different explanation: “This theory suggests that music is powerful not just because we hear it, but because our brains and bodies become it,” said co-author Caroline Palmer. Researchers show brain rhythms sync with sound to create emotion, movement and meaning.
Potential applications of the theory include:
- Therapeutic tools for conditions like stroke, Parkinson’s and depression
- Emotionally intelligent AI that can respond to or generate music more like humans
- New learning technologies to support rhythm and pitch education
- Cross-cultural insight into why music connects people around the world
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“music is an outburst of the soul.”
― f
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Source credits:
Study was led by Edward Large (University of Connecticut) and co-authored by Caroline Palmer.
Canada Research Chair and NSERC Discovery, McGill University, Science News, Science Discovery
Nature Reviews, Neuroscience
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I agree, music is so beautiful, and, I love listening to it!
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it’s an ongoing presence in my life
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Not surprising, but it’s good to have the science behind it.
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exactly, guess it breaks it down for us
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I think we already knew that, but I suppose the study is good confirmation of what we might have imagined was just a momentary ‘feeling’.
Best wishes, Pete.
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exactly, confirms it and puts it into scientific words
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Very true Beth.
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this fascinates me
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💖💖💖
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I’ve loved how music affects animals, who must take it in on a more innocent and primal level than even we do. The Facebook recounting of cattle and elephants coming to listen to music fascinate me. A great post, Beth!
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oh, yes, I love watching those
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circumstances beyond my control, kept me from becoming a Music Therapist 30 years ago. That being said, the ability of music to elevate the human condition (animals and plants, and water as well) are incalculable!
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absolutely-
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This is fascinating! And explains why our music taste says so much about us!
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it really makes so much sense
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Yes, music is so good for the body. And soul. Where would we be without it!
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so agree!
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Yes, music has always moved me, Beth.
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This is so true. I volunteer at a food pantry and have the past five years. I work outside loading cars with groceries. The team I work with plays music as we work and it makes us laugh and sing and helps our clients feel welcome. What a great post. Thank you.
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Fantastic!
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I believe this so completely, Beth. Music does so very much more than please (or displease!) the ears!
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we totally respond to it
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Absolutely
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Been a musician all my life and have thought about this a lot.
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yes, I imagine as a musician, it was on your mind even more so
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Music always had the ability to cut through my mom’s dementia. She always recognized and tapped along to music of her era. I completely agree that brains and bodies “become” it…and can return to it, too.
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that’s so wonderful. I witnessed this many times when visiting my mom in her memory care unit and watching the nonverbal patients respond to music
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Ah, yes, mom was in a memory care unit too. One Thanksgiving, they had live music, and one woman was even dancing! They all felt it on some level. I was so happy that the home had planned this event.
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oh, yes, that’s so lovely and I’m glad that the home understood and embraced this for them
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I appreciate music, too, especially that from my teen and young adult years, aka the 70s. My granddaughter is giving her first piano recital on Sunday. I’m thankful she’s embraced music, thanks to a musically-gifted dad.
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oh, how exiting. music has always been one of my great worldly pleasures. as a listener, but not as a practitioner –
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Didn’t need a study to tell me what I already knew, but nice to have it documented. My first thought was those elderly folks with dementia whom no one can reach … but they react when they hear familiar music.
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I agree. and I witnessed this firsthand many times when visiting my mother in a memory care ward, the non verbal patients would lift their heads, move to the music and respond, every time.
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We embody it — such a great description of how it moves us. Love it!
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yes, it makes so much sense
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Music is vibration, and I can imagine well that the fitting vibration to a person supports their healing.
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absolutely
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I love the sense of this. Especially when it comes to instrumental music. And after reading your post, I thought of a Phillip Glass piece: Violin Concerto 1. It’s beautiful, and if you’re interested, a performance is here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5lGNtPXcA04
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this is very beautiful, thank you for sharing it –
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Who could ever argue with that?
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I know this intuitively already from the time we are very young
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I think it’s just who we are.
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The neuroscience behind music is so interesting indeed. I’m reading your post as I unwind for the day and have EDM blasting in the background. Something about the right music that clicks with our brain chemistry that just make us feel good. I see this with T as well. Definitely something to continue to be studied and nurtured!
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Yes, and we each have certain kinds of music that we respond to in different types of music that we like for different feelings or at different times.
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That’s so very true.
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Makes perfect sense. I can’t tell you how many days music lifts my spirits.
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this explains what our intuition already tells us
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I have to say that is quite interesting
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I think we know this intuitively and this science explains why
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I don’t think I can live without music. I was drawn to opera when I was a teenager not knowing what it was. Then I sang in choirs almost all my life. I used to drive an hour or longer each way to and from work and listen between two stations.
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yes, as a commuter for many years it really got me through and my mother even noted in my baby book that I would cry when she’d turn off the music,
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You were born to love music, Beth!
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Music is just tonic ❤️ and everything else.
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you’re so right
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Music was my first love, and it will be my last…🎶
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I could not live without it
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I don’t know the science but I know music is one of the great pleasures of life.
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science had to catch up with our intuition
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Brain scans have shown that learning to play musical instruments is one of the great brain builders, along with learning foreign languages and doing math.
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I’m not surprised, but it’s good to be reminded of how powerful music is in a positive way. Music has always been a big part of my life when I sang in the younger years, striving to be a professional vocalist. Now writing takes the front seat with music as the passenger. Great post, Beth!
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how wonderful! I’ve never been a good singer, but it never stopped me from singing to or with my class or joining in a group, and I’ve always loved music.
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Well, my voice isn’t what it used to be. It’s that old adage, if you don’t exercise it….:)I’m glad you’ve sung no matter what. We’ve all heard that music is the universal language. 🎶
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I believe it, there’s no greater escape than music.
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I so agree!
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🙌
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Lovely :)
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<3
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I don’t doubt this for a second. Music is something out of this world
Thank you Beth.
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absolutely and we all feel it
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Yes, yes, yes!!!
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Music is sustenance for our souls.
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it really is
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