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Song
Stuck in Your Head? You're Not Alone
Excerpt
By Alison McCook,
Reuters Health
The vast majority of people say they
have been mentally tortured at one point in their lives by a song
that keeps repeating itself over and over in their heads.
And new research shows that people
most frequently plagued by this phenomenon are those with slightly
neurotic tendencies, and people who enjoy and listen to music
often.
These mental broken records are
also more likely to play the first or last song we hear in different
situations, such as the first song that comes on in the morning
alarm, or the last song playing before we turn off the car, study
findings show.
Songs that topped the list as being
most likely to stick around in someone's head included the Baha
Men's "Who Let the Dogs Out?" and the Chili's restaurant jingle
about Baby Back Ribs.
But the number one song rated most
likely to cause this phenomenon, referred to as an "earworm" in
Germany, is "other"--indicating that many different songs can
become stuck in our heads.
"Just about anything can get stuck
in people's heads," study author Dr. James Kellaris of the University
of Cincinnati told Reuters Health.
"We each have our personal demonic
tunes that get stuck in our heads, I guess," he added.
Kellaris presented results from
his current study on Saturday at the Society for Consumer Psychology
Winter Conference in New Orleans.
Kellaris's previous research into
the phenomenon of earworms revealed that "sticky" songs are those
that are relatively simple, repetitive, and contain an element
that surprises the listener. This incongruous element can be an
interrupted pattern, or something that violates expectations of
what comes next.
During the current study, Kellaris
distributed surveys to 559 people aged 18 to 49 asking them about
their personalities, how often tunes got stuck in their heads,
how long the episodes lasted, and when the phenomenon was most
likely to happen.
Ninety-eight percent of respondents
said they had experienced stuck songs. Most said the episodes
occurred "frequently," and lasted an average of a few hours.
Songs with lyrics were most often
the culprits, a trend that Kellaris said is not surprising. Often
what gets sticky is not just a tune, but also lyrics, a trend
he calls "stupid lyrics syndrome." Combining a tune and lyrics
ups the chance of song snippets staying with the listener for
hours, he said.
Episodes of earworms also tend
to strike people with neurotic tendencies more often. These people
are not seriously neurotic, Kellaris said, but may simply be more
prone to worrying and anxiety, and may have neurotic habits like
biting pencils or tapping fingernails.
Women were more likely than men
to report feeling annoyed, frustrated, or irritated about having
songs stuck in their heads--a trend Kellaris said he is hard pressed
to explain.
In terms of how to protect yourself
from earworms, Kellaris recommended that people not worry about
a stuck song as soon as it appears, and perhaps avoid listening
to music for a spell if it becomes too sticky.
Strategies people report using
to rid themselves of stuck tunes involved trying to listen to
something else, distracting themselves with another activity,
and trying to erase the repetition of one song snippet by singing
the song all the way through.
"If they can't remember the lyrics,
sometimes it helps for them to sing through the entire song, and
then it will go away," Kellaris said.
Kellaris said he has also heard
a "folkloric" recommendation of chewing on cinnamon sticks to
rid the brain of a sticky song.
"Some people swear that will unstick
a stuck tune," he said.
Reference
Source 89
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