Sunday, December 1, 2019
Mozart Effect Essays - Auditory System, Music Therapy, Cochlea
  Mozart Effect    Although it is only in recent times that scientists have started to document the  effects of music, the qualities of music were understood even in earliest times.    Evidence suggests that dance and song preceded speech, which means that music is  the original language of humans. Researcher's have found that about two-thirds  of the inner ear's cilia resonate only at the higher frequencies that are  commonly found in music (3,000 - 20,000 Hz). This seems to indicate that  primitive humans communicated primarily through song or tone. The ancient Greek  philosopher Pythagoras, best known for his work in mathematics, thought the  whole universe was comprised of sounds and numbers. There has long been an  awareness that music affects us, even if the reasons are not clear. Around 900    B.C., David played the harp "to cure Saul's derangement" (Gonzalez-Crussi).    One os the world's oldest medical documents, the Ebers Papyrus (circa 1500    B.C.), prescribed incantations that Egyptian physicians chanted to heal the  sick. This is perhaps the first recorded use of music for therapy. The positive  influence of music may have also saved Beethoven's life in the early eighteenth  century. In a letter he wrote, "I would have ended my life-it was only my  art that held me back" (Kamien). Every human civilization has developed  some sort of musical idiom and has used it as a form of tranquilizer, as a  lullaby. Great civilizations have developed without the wheel, without a written  language, without money, but the use of soothing sounds seems to be a very basic  component of human physiology. There are distinct differences between  compositions of different societies, but in spite of this, they can convey the  same moods, the same feelings, in all people. As Louis Pasteur's Germ Theory of    Illness launched the era of scientific medicine, music largely faded from formal  medical settings. Fortunately, it never completely disappeared. American  medicine first started experimenting with the therapeutic use of music during  the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. As early as 1804, Edwin Atlee,  wrote an essay in which he hoped to show that music, "has a powerful  influence upon the mind, and consequently on the body." Modern music  therapy began to develop in the 1940's when psychotherapists used music to calm  anxious patients, and music therapy programs were established in several  university psychology departments. The relatively new field of neuro-musicology  has been developed to experiment with music as a tool and to dissect and shape  it to the needs of society. The auditory sense The visible portion of the ear  consists of an external shell, with an aperture known as the meatus or auditory  canal in the lower half. At the other end of this canal, about an inch inside  the head is a small membrane of skin about 3/1000 of an inch thick. This piece  of skin is stretched tightly over a framework of bone much like skin is  stretched over a frame of wood to make a drum, and hence the name eardrum. Just  behind the eardrum lies a chain of three small bones known as ossicles. The  first ossicle is in contact with the eardrum, and the last presses against the  oval window that leads to the cochlea. The ossicles serve to amplify the tiny  changes in air pressure. The oval window passes the motion on to the fluid  inside the cochlea. The neural tissue in the cochlea lies on the basilar  membrane. The basilar membrane holds the auditory receptors, tiny hair cells  called cilia. Waves in the fluid of the ear stimulate the hair cells to send  signals to through the thalamus to the temporal lobes of the brain. Sound  reaches the ear in the form of waves which have traveled through the surrounding  air. When the waves reach the ear, they exert varying pressures on the ear-drum  and it is sent into motion. This motion is eventually detected by nerves and  sent to the brain (as described above). The ear-drum is a remarkably sensitive  instrument, an air displacement of only a ten-billionth of an inch is enough to  send a signal to the brain. This is far more sensitive than the best barometers  that scientists have today. Although the ear is very sensitive to minute changes  in air pressure, it is only when these pressure changes are repeated in rapid  succession that the messages are passed to the brain. Music Therapy Heart    Attacks The latest research demonstrates that music therapy has a variety of  healing effects. A study was conducted on three separate coronary care units in  hospitals. One group received only standard care,    
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