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一项研究表明,悲伤的音乐现在越来越受人们的欢迎。为什么人们选择听悲伤的音乐?在听这类音乐时,人们的大脑和身体在发生着什么变化?为什么悲伤的音乐能让一些人感到快乐?
What would life be like without music? Songs and tunes fill our lives, affecting our emotions, bringing back memories and sometimes making us dance. There is a song for everyone and for every occasion, but it seems that its sad music that moves us most.
Sad music certainly does its job in making us depressed, emotional, and causing us to sob—its something we might listen to after a breakup, for example. And a recent study has shown why some people are hooked on sad music. Professor David Huron from Ohio State University conducted the research and looked at the difference between people who love to listen to sad music and those who cant stand it.
He told the BBC radio programme The Why Factor that it comes down to a natural hormone called prolactin(催乳激素). He said, “As you might have guessed from the name, its associated with ‘lactation’ from breastfeeding. When people cry, they also release prolactin. And, there are circumstances in which prolactin seems to have this comforting effect.” It seems that people who like sad music are maybe getting too much prolactin, or more than is normal, and when they hear sad and downbeat(悲觀的) music, it gives them a good feeling. But if prolactin isnt released, or there isnt enough of it, some people find that sad sounds dont help to cheer them up.
Previous research by Durham University has also suggested that listening to sad music can trigger(引发) pain and sadness; but it can also provide comfort and even enjoyment. A high number of people they surveyed were cheered up by listening to supposedly sad songs. Though the feeling may not be exactly the same as happiness, it may be the ability to cope with the sadness that gives the feeling of comfort.
So, reacting to sad music on the radio may have nothing to do with the melancholic(忧郁的) sound of a string quartet or a singer whos got the blues, but rather a natural chemical reaction taking place in our bodies. Maybe that explanation is music to your ears if youre wondering why youve be listening to Adele on repeat!
1. What does the underlined word “hooked” in paragraph 2 mean?
A. Doubtful.
What would life be like without music? Songs and tunes fill our lives, affecting our emotions, bringing back memories and sometimes making us dance. There is a song for everyone and for every occasion, but it seems that its sad music that moves us most.
Sad music certainly does its job in making us depressed, emotional, and causing us to sob—its something we might listen to after a breakup, for example. And a recent study has shown why some people are hooked on sad music. Professor David Huron from Ohio State University conducted the research and looked at the difference between people who love to listen to sad music and those who cant stand it.
He told the BBC radio programme The Why Factor that it comes down to a natural hormone called prolactin(催乳激素). He said, “As you might have guessed from the name, its associated with ‘lactation’ from breastfeeding. When people cry, they also release prolactin. And, there are circumstances in which prolactin seems to have this comforting effect.” It seems that people who like sad music are maybe getting too much prolactin, or more than is normal, and when they hear sad and downbeat(悲觀的) music, it gives them a good feeling. But if prolactin isnt released, or there isnt enough of it, some people find that sad sounds dont help to cheer them up.
Previous research by Durham University has also suggested that listening to sad music can trigger(引发) pain and sadness; but it can also provide comfort and even enjoyment. A high number of people they surveyed were cheered up by listening to supposedly sad songs. Though the feeling may not be exactly the same as happiness, it may be the ability to cope with the sadness that gives the feeling of comfort.
So, reacting to sad music on the radio may have nothing to do with the melancholic(忧郁的) sound of a string quartet or a singer whos got the blues, but rather a natural chemical reaction taking place in our bodies. Maybe that explanation is music to your ears if youre wondering why youve be listening to Adele on repeat!
1. What does the underlined word “hooked” in paragraph 2 mean?
A. Doubtful.