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As Dark As My Soul Default Fuuka

/mu/ - Music (Temp full images)


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File: 53 KB, 800x800, feels.png [Show reposts] Image reverse search: [iqdb] [google]
33778717 No.33778717 [Reply] [Original]

What is the name of the sublime feeling you get when listening to a really good tune?

>pic related

>> No.33778792

frisson

>> No.33778992

>>33778792
>A cold chill (also known as chills, the chills, frisson or simply thrills) is described by David Huron[clarification needed] as, "a pleasant tingling feeling, associated with the flexing of hair follicles resulting in goose bumps (technically called piloerection), accompanied by a cold sensation, and sometimes producing a shudder or shiver."
I get that from classical music sometimes.

However, goose bumps are rare. The feeling I usually get is something else: it's a serene, blissful happiness, without the chills.

>> No.33779008

eargasm

>> No.33779011

inb4 some autist starts posting asmr videos

>> No.33779025

>>33779008
Isn't that when you stick a q-tip in your ear?

>> No.33779056

Enjoyment.
/thread

>> No.33779083

>>33779056
no.

feels.
/thread

>> No.33779106

>enjoyment
>feels
these are too vague.

>> No.33779144

>>33779106
enjoyment is pretty accurate

>> No.33779188

>>33778717
bliss

>> No.33779193

enjoyment could stand for a lot of things.

>> No.33779203

>>33779188
or delight

>> No.33779210

dopamine

>> No.33779222

>>33779193
too mundane

>> No.33779253

placebo

>> No.33779282

Montreal Neurological Institute researcher Valorie Salimpoor and her colleagues have shown that the pleasurable feelings associated with emotional music are the result of dopamine release in the striatum - the same anatomical areas that underpin the anticipatory and rewarding aspects of drug addiction.
>Salimpoor, VN; Benovoy, M; Larcher, K; Dagher, A; Zatorre, RJ (2011). "Anatomically distinct dopamine release during anticipation and experience of peak emotion to music". Nature Neuroscience 14 (2): 257-62. doi:10.1038/nn.2726. PMID 21217764.

>> No.33779307

>>33779210
>>33779282
/thread

>> No.33779316

>>33779282
"Our results help to explain why music is of such high value across all human societies."

>> No.33779356

You guys ever get that where you're so happy and hopped up on dopamine that you feel high?

>> No.33779375

>>33779282
also endorphin
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZTrCYvchnak

>> No.33779394

>>33779356
often. the best is oxytocine rush though

>> No.33779402

>>33779356
Sometimes music feels a little like an addiction, yes.

>> No.33779408

>>33779394
inb4 faggot

>> No.33779414

emotional association gives you a 'high', basically your brain releasing endorphins

the word for a 'high' doesn't describe the neurological process that results in getting one

>> No.33779452

>>33779394
uh
you mean the hormone that leads to increase uterine contractions during childbirth
yeah man
gets me every time

>> No.33779463

>>33779056
That's clearly not what OP meant.

>>33779356
I always feel high.

It's not as good as it sounds.

>> No.33779468

well it depends.

If it is a song that is dark/sad then I feel awe.

If it is a song that is cheerful and poppy then I feel happy

>> No.33779478

>>33779414
u wot m80
what do you mean by your last sentence?

>> No.33779506
File: 87 KB, 750x980, stephanie-pfriender-1999-03.jpg [Show reposts] Image reverse search: [iqdb] [google]
33779506

eargasm

chills/shivers

>> No.33779515

>>33779452
lel lrn2 to neurotransmitters. oxytocine is also responsible for deep emotional bonding. ever got that literally warm feeling all over your body when you met a friend of yours? lover? family member? yeah that's it

>> No.33779516

I never felt the dopamine/endorphin explanations really explained much.

More to the point, how can music - something abstract, complex and not concrete - have such a dramatic effect? HOW?

>> No.33779528

>>33779463
You obviously don't

>> No.33779551

euphoria?

>> No.33779555

>>33779478
there isn't a word beyond 'high', 'enjoyment' 'good feeling' that is an accurate description of the chemical being released due to emotional association

>> No.33779575

>>33779515
i think that's oestrogen. have you also been developing breasts?

>> No.33779579

>>33779551
from wikipedia:Music euphoria is a euphoric state in which the individual is abnormally enchanted by music. In this state of mind, music leads the subject into a trance; they may have sensations of flying or spinning. The individual may also start to see or feel sound. Also, this euphoria may lead to an urge to dance. This state is particularly known to be induced by cannabis, MDMA, and psychedelic drugs in general. Some research suggests that it's possible to represent this subjective state by brainwaves recorded using EEG scans.[20]
[edit]

>> No.33779613

>>33779515
unless you're a mother that just gave birth, this doesn't apply to you
also there's no e
also a neurotransmitter is not a hormone
also stop trying to sound intellectual

>> No.33779619

Bliss/eargasm/heaven on earth

>> No.33779688

>>33779516

personal connection to it.

Like I used an animal collective song on a video and now I can't even listen to MPP anymore because I get memories from it and I get embarrassed and it fucks me up.

>> No.33779700

>>33779575
>>33779613
*sigh*
Recent studies have begun to investigate oxytocin's role in various behaviors, including orgasm, social recognition, pair bonding, anxiety, and maternal behaviors.[2] For this reason, it is sometimes referred to as the "love hormone". There is some evidence that oxytocin promotes ethnocentric behavior, incorporating the trust and empathy of in-groups with their suspicion and rejection of outsiders.[3] Furthermore, genetic differences in the oxytocin receptor gene (OXTR) have been associated with maladaptive social traits such as aggressive behaviour.[4]
yes. from wiki

>> No.33779739

>>33779555
oh yeah. maybe. but there are other sounds, like mmmmm or a deep sigh, etc

>> No.33779754

>>33779575
an no breasts sorry and I'm a man yeah

>> No.33779768

its called my dick up yo mum's pussy

>> No.33779771

>>33779700
this doesn't change the fact that
a. you don't understand the difference between an NT and a hormone, and you didn't know how to spell oxytocin

and copy pasting material from wikipedia prefaced by "recent studies have begun to investigate" does not support your argument

now fuck off

>> No.33779880

>>33779771
please be kind and explain me the difference between a NT and a hormore, I'm willing to learn. I might have misspelled it, I pray to Lord that this be my biggest fault. what would support my argument and why should I fuck off? all of my what

>> No.33779943

>>33779771
>>33779880
allow me to tell you that the only difference is that a neurotransmitter is only locally present in the CNS whereas a hormone gets in the bloodstream yet plays the same role. um.

>> No.33779988

>>33779613
and I would try to sounds less inttelectual if I wasn't actually intelligent, ha

>> No.33780074

>>33779880
Neurotransmitters are a type of hormone.

>> No.33780097

>>33780074
thank you anon

>> No.33780136

>>33780074
and the term is used in reference to their effect on CNS cells so I guess me calling oxytocin no e a neurotransmitter was etymologically correct

>> No.33780152

>>33780136
*ethymologically inb4 pseudointellect

>> No.33780216

euphoria, "digging it"

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