Robert Zatori
While it is true that music is inspired by nature, the human brain plays a major role. Not only that, but the brain also plays an important role in the pleasant, fluid sensations that come to us after listening to music. How the brain recognizes music is a very mysterious question. Dr. working on that question. Robert Zatori has been awarded the prestigious Cavarhalo-Henken Prize of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences this year. Our nervous system plays an important role in both music production and music enjoyment. "People listen to music through different mediums and experience it differently," Zatori said of the human perception of music, which is the basic invention of cognition.
One music sounds sweet and the other sounds harsh, but they explain how a person can make a difference. According to him, in the left hemisphere of our brain, the beginning of a song is cognitively processed, while in the right hemisphere, its sweetness is recorded! As far as we know, if the left side of the brain is injured, it will have an adverse effect on speech, language comprehension, if there is some defect in the right side, you will not be able to enjoy music properly.
Zatori’s group studied the brain using FMRI, a magnetic resonance method. People feel better when they listen to emotional music. At the height of that music, they rejoice and thrill. They get this pleasure by releasing a chemical called dopamine from the brain. Dopamine also plays an important role in our survival when we consume food or other things. But it was Zatori who matched the concert of music and brain science. He was born in Buenos Aires. He studied psychology and music at Boston University. He founded the International Laboratory for Brain Music and Sound Research in Montreal in 2006. He has previously received numerous honors, including the Neuroplasticity Award, the Hughes Novels Award, and the Oliver Sax Award. His award has done justice to both his scientists and music lovers.

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