Vestibulocochlear Nerve (VIII)
Active listening.
You can get a spiritual feeling while playing or listening to music. Some people may feel weird when listening to certain music.
When you are listening to music, the brain analyses the various patterns that the music creates. Music is about pattern recognition, on the neurological level.
I would say that in your case the music is distracting your attention from what you are trying to study... try listening to music that has no lyrics. Instrumental stuff actually helps me memorize better. Good luck with it!
You're listening to rap if the singer is known to rap or he/she is singing or talking quickly.
Vestibulocochlear VIII
Cranial nerve VIII (vestibulocochlear or auditory) is predominantly sensory. The vestibular branch is involved in balance and equilibrium. The cochlear branch is involved in hearing.
apoo love aima
The vestibulocochlear nerve or cranial nerve 8 (CN8) is largely involved with listening to music. However the trigeminal nerve (CN5), which innervates the tensor tympani, and the facial nerve (CN7), which innervates the stapedius muscle, may alter the perception of sound and theoretically affect the perception of music.
Passive listening is the kind of listening we do at the grocery store, in the elevator, or at the dentist. This is background listening, where the music washes over you while you are involved in another activity.
The Vestibulocochlear nerve is associated with balance and hearing. Vestibulo-balance, cochlear-hearing.
Vestibulocochlear nerve (CN VIII). More specifically vestibular nerve of CN VIII is responsible for equilibrium and balance.
because some kids work better listening to music because when kids hear a song there brain sends signals to their nerves and from their nerves to there thinking area on their brain which helps them learn and be more succesful:)
Active listening.
No! U cannot die with listening to much music!
I think it is if you enjoy listening to music
Easy Listening Music is what used to be elevator music like Percy Faith, Perry Como