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Study: People Who Make Music Together, Socially Connect to Each Other | The Jewish Press - JewishPress com | Hana Levi Julian | 1 Tammuz 5781 – June 10, 2021

Study: People Who Make Music Together, Socially Connect to Each Other | The Jewish Press - JewishPress com | Hana Levi Julian | 1 Tammuz 5781 – June 10, 2021
jewishpress.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from jewishpress.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

What happens in the brain when people make music together?

 E-Mail IMAGE: Inspired by creative efforts of people around the world to reproduce music-making together while social distancing during the COVID-19 pandemic, researchers from Bar-Ilan University in Israel and the University of. view more  Credit: Background artwork: Bryan Christie Design Overlay design: Dr. David M. Greenberg Music is a tool that has accompanied our evolutionary journey and provided a sense of comfort and social connection for millennia. New research published today in the American Psychologist provides a neuroscientific understanding of the social connection with a new map of the brain when playing music. A team of social neuroscientists from Bar-Ilan University and the University of Chicago introduced a model of the brain that sheds light on the social functions and brain mechanisms that underlie the musical adaptations used for human connection. The model is unique because it focuses on what happens in the brain when people make music together

African cichlid fish could serve as a premier model of social disorders

Social Media Is Making Us Behave Like Rats, According to Study

Social Media Is Making Us Behave Like Rats, According to Study On 3/8/21 at 10:43 AM EST If you find yourself posting more and more content on Instagram because of the likes you receive, that s because your brain is apparently being conditioned to behave like that of a rat seeking food. At least, those are the findings of a new study conducted by an international team of scientists. Is social media making us behave like rats? Getty Using a computational model, the scientists found a direct correlation between the frequency with which a person posts and how many likes their posts receive. In a paper recently published in the science journal

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