Research Hit: Human Brains Naturally Build “Music Neurons”

Andy Hab
3 min readFeb 13, 2024

Music seems to be an inbuilt instinct with brain cells being assigned to music — and this improves auditory ability

Andy, I hear you have become a bit of an audiophile — interested in high-quality music production?

Indeed, and you didn’t mention spending vast amount of money to gain aural bliss!

Audiophiles tend to be a bit technical but primarily music lovers — loving the sounds and emotions that music in all its forms generate.

And this music instinct seems to be natural, right?

Right. Obviously as all cultures have music, and just about everybody likes some form of music, it seems obvious that this is instinctive.

But the ins and outs of this are not clear, and how the brain builds this instinct also, and this is why this recent piece of research by Gwangsu Kim and colleagues of the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST) is insightful.

So what did they do?

First off, this is research using artificial neural networks — basically a simulation of the brain.

Can this be transferred to the real brain?

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Andy Hab
Andy Hab

Written by Andy Hab

Sharing fascinating, fun, and important knowledge on the brain and human behaviour - most days. And masters track athlete - still going strong!

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