emotions
Retired Army Col. Farrell Patrick taught computer science at West Point during the 1970s and then at two private universities through the 1990s, so he isn't surprised by the progress technology has made over the decades. But when the 91-year-old got his first virtual reality experience recently, he was stunned. Sitting in a conference room at John Knox Village, a suburban Fort Lauderdale, Florida, retirement community, Patrick sat up straight as his eyes and ears experienced what it would be like to be in a Navy fighter jet flying off the Florida coast. “Oh my God, that's beautiful,” he blurte...
Euronews (English)
You know when a really good song gives you goosebumps? Or when you can’t stop your feet from tapping to a killer beat? What about music-induced head bobs and shoulder shimmies? Movement and emotions are inextricably linked to music, and music inextricably linked to humans. But if music is the “universal language of mankind,” does that mean we all respond to it the same way? A new study out of Finland suggests that despite cultural differences, our bodies and minds respond similarly to music that’s considered happy, sad, tender, scary, aggressive or groovy. “People seem to ‘feel’ music in a sim...
Euronews (English)
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