Music can Affect Your Heartbeat, if you went a concert before you must be felt that hearthbeat feeling almost like skip a beat. Music can affect your heart with many emotion.
Music affects the cardiovascular system through multiple potential mechanisms. One pathway includes brain signals responding to music rhythms through signal activations to organs of the body, including the heart, which then respond to the tempo of the song.
Table of Content
The Effect of Heart Rate
When the tempo is fast, the heart rate and blood pressure speed up, and when the tempo is slow the heart rate and blood pressure slow down. Similar to the findings in this study, Suguna and Deepika reported that fast music increases heart rate and blood pressure, and slow music decreases both parameters. Furthermore, Bernardi et al. observed that fast-beat music has an arousal effect proportional to the speed of music.
The Effect of Emotion
Music is a tool that has an impact on human mood and behavior regardless what of kind of music it is, it effects in either good or bad ways and 91.8% of people agreed that they get influenced by the music
87.3% people said that listening to calm music put them in a calm state and it leaves a positive effect on their mind and mood. Music is something that everyone enjoys listening to. And all get inspired of it so; obviously a calm music will always leave positive effect on its listener.
It is said that watching a violent movie can make your child violent and aggressive, in the same way listening to heavy metal music people can put themselves in an angry state but 52.7% people agree with this problem in question
Conclusion
In conclusion, our study suggests classical music has a positive impact on the cardiovascular system and potential emotional benefits. Music affects the cardiovascular system through multiple potential mechanisms including the autonomic nervous system and the vagus nerve which responds to musical vibrations by triggering the body to relax. Music also affects other parts of the brain, which in turn affects the mood through the release of neurotransmitters such as dopamine. Dopamine release may contribute to the study findings which found that 83% of subjects found fast music uplifting. Finally, nearly all subjects believe music can help manage stress. Listening to music may be a potential therapeutic method for reducing anxiety and depression. Given the large sample size, the study adds greatly to the current literature by validating the results of other smaller studies.
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