| eatthis.inmusic.ca |
news.yahoo.com
Music always seems to bring comfort especially in dire situations. The author of the article describes when she broke up with her first love. Listening to "November Rain" by Guns 'n' Roses brought what the author said "solace and ...a bit of peace". Music may have the possibility of a person' way of seeing things visually. To test the hypothesis, scientists from the Netherlands last year gathered 43 teenagers. The young adults were told to look at a computer screen, where flashes of smiley faces and frowning faces appeared. The teenagers were told to respond To the flashing pictures whether if it was smiling or frowning, and was also told not to respond if the teenager couldn't make of the image. Each subject brought his or her own music, 15 minutes of sad music and 15 minutes of joyful music. The conclusion was that the subjects were more precise in recognizing smiley faces when listening to happy music and more accurate noticing frowning faces listening to sad music.
This can relate to our classroom setting because the researchers developed a hypothesis and then tested it to discover the conclusion. Similar to some of our labs, we find a hypothesis, predicting what would happen. Then, we test it, to see if the prediction is true. Sometimes the hypothesis is right, in some cases it is wrong. The outcome, or the conclusion determines whether the hypothesis is right. The researchers in the Netherlands tested their subjects accurately so the results were precise. Today, we need researchers to develop explanations for things that we don't know much about. It's the scientists that work hard into developing clarifications that help modernize our understandings of science.
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