Want to fill the dancefloor? Drop some bass

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Bass makes people want to move even if they can't actually hear it, according to international researchers. The team, working at a unique music research theatre that can host musical concerts, strapped motion sensors to participants attending a gig to see whether the inclusion of bass too low for humans to hear would impact how much people danced. The researchers say after turning the undetectable bass on and off every two minutes, the researchers say there was about 12% more movement when the bass was turned on. This suggests even when we can't hear the rhythm of the bass, we can feel it.

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From: Cell Press

Peer-reviewed           Observational study           People

Want to fire up the dance floor? Play low-frequency bass

To find out how different aspects of music influence the body, researchers turned a live electronic music concert into a lab study. By introducing levels of bass over speakers that were too low to hear and monitoring the crowd's movements, scientists found that people danced 11.8 percent more when the very low frequency bass was present. The study appears November 7 in the journal Current Biology.

“I'm trained as a drummer, and most of my research career has been focused on the rhythmic aspects of music and how they make us move,” says first author Daniel Cameron (@Dan_Cameron), a neuroscientist from McMaster University. “Music is a biological curiosity--it doesn't reproduce us, it doesn't feed us, and it doesn't shelter us, so why do humans like it and why do they like to move to it?”

Cameron conducts research at the McMaster LIVELab, which connects science with live performance in a unique research theater. It is equipped with 3D motion capture, a Meyer sound system that can replicate various concert environments, and enhanced speakers that can produce extremely low frequencies, so low they were undetectable to the human ear.

For the Current Biology study, Cameron and colleagues recruited participants attending a LIVELab concert for electronic musical duo Orphx. The concertgoers were equipped with motion-sensing headbands to monitor their dance moves. Additionally, they were asked to fill out survey forms before and after the event. These forms were used to ensure the sound was undetectable, measure concert enjoyment, and examine how the music felt physically.

Throughout the 45-minute concert, the researchers manipulated the very-low bass-playing speakers, turning them on and off every two minutes. They found the amount of movement was 12 percent greater when the speakers were on.

“The musicians were enthusiastic to participate because of their interest in this idea that bass can change how the music is experienced in a way that impacts movement,” says Cameron. “The study had high ecological validity, as this was a real musical and dance experience for people at a real live show.”

The feeling of vibration through touch and the interactions between the inner ear and the brain have close links to the motor system. The researchers speculate these physical processes are at work in the neurological connection between music and movement. This anatomy can pick up on low frequencies and can affect the perception of “groove”, spontaneous movement, and rhythm perception.

“Very low frequencies may also affect vestibular sensitivity, adding to people’s experience of movement. Nailing down the brain mechanisms involved will require looking the effects of low frequencies on the vestibular, tactile, and auditory pathways,” says Cameron.

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Financial support was provided by the Social Science and Humanities Research Council of Canada, the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada, the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, and the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research.

Current Biology, Cameron et al. “Undetectable very low frequency sound increases dancing at a live concert.”

URL for after the embargo lifts: https://www.cell.com/current-biology/fulltext/S0960-9822(22)01535-4
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2022.09.035

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Research Cell Press, Web page The URL will go live after the embargo ends
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Current Biology
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Organisation/s: McMaster University, Canada
Funder: This research was supported by grants to L.J.T. from Social Science and Humanities Research Council of Canada (Insight Grant 435-2020-0442), the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (Discovery Grant RGPIN-2019-05416), the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (Project Grant MOP 153130), and the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research.
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