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Why do tunes get stuck in our heads? The science behind earworms.


Earworms are those catchy/irritating songs that get stuck in your head, but why are certain tunes so impossible to erase from your mind?

Getting a song stuck in your head is known by many different names including stuck song syndrome, or earworm, a term translated from the German word Ohrwurm. Daniel Levitin, a neuroscientist at McGill University in Montreal, Canada, has suggested that it has an evolutionary origin. Before writing was invented, just 5000 years ago, songs helped people to remember and share information. Levitin suggests that variations of rhythm and melody provide the cues for easier recall, something that continues in communities with strong oral traditions. This chimes with the findings of James Kellaris, professor of marketing at the University of Cincinnati, Ohio, who says earworms occur when you subconsciously detect something unusual about a piece of music. Usually between 15 and 30 seconds long, an earworm is replayed in your mind in a loop and is difficult to dislodge.

Music that is repetitive and simple, yet with an unexpected variation in rhythm, is most likely to become an earworm. For example, the repetitive melody and shifting time signatures of the song ’America’ from West Side Story, Kellaris claims that 98% of people experience the feeling. About 74% of earworms are songs with lyrics, 15% are jingles from adverts, whereas instrumental pieces account for only 11% of earworms.

 

Dr. Jean - The Guacamole Song

A great example of a highly effective earworm

 

Victoria Williamson, a music psychologist at Gold- smiths, University of London, suggests a number of triggers. Earworms are more likely to be bits of songs that have been heard recently or repeatedly. A song associated with a stressful or stimulating experience is also a good candidate.

In the early 1980's, Myron Warshauer tried to exploit this by patenting a 'musical floor reminder system’ in multi— storey car parks in the US. The system helped people recall which floor they parked on by associating music and murals with each one.

For more information check out The Earworm Project

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