Why music makes us move, even when we don’t like it If you hate ABBA, but you can't help tapping your foot along to “Dancing Queen,” rest assured, it's a perfectly normal reaction. Music makes us move ...
People with musical anhedonia do not enjoy music but still feel the urge to move. Movement itself may generate pleasure.
The pleasurable urge to move to music -- to groove -- appears to be a physiological response independent of how much we generally enjoy music, according to a new article. That groove response is so ...
A new study finds that the urge to move to music—known as groove—is a distinct physiological response, separate from musical ...
The pleasurable urge to move to music—to groove—appears to be a physiological response independent of how much we generally ...
This study examined the important question of how neurons code temporal information across the hippocampus, dorsal striatum, and orbitofrontal cortex. Using a behavioral task in the rat that requires ...
This important study offers insights into the function and connectivity patterns of a relatively unknown afferent input from the endopiriform to the CA1 subfield of the ventral hippocampus, suggesting ...
The parts of the brain typically affected are the prefrontal cortex, the ventral striatum, and the dorsal striatum, among other areas. As the dopamine level increases it is associated with the ...