#easy-eye-sound

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Psychology
fromwww.theguardian.com
10 hours ago

They're in clouds, electric sockets and even on toast. Why do humans see faces in everyday objects?

Face pareidolia is a common phenomenon where people see faces in inanimate objects and visual noise, influenced by symmetry and context.
Berlin music
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

When Music Was Used to Deceive, Control, Survive

Yom HaShoah commemorates the 6 million Jews and 5 million others who perished in the Holocaust, reflecting on music's dual role in history.
Music production
fromKALTBLUT Magazine
2 days ago

Wasia Project Unveils New Single "2515": A Sonic Journey Through Night - KALTBLUT Magazine

Wasia Project's new single '2515' blends cinematic alt-pop with Berlin's nightlife energy, showcasing their evolution and maturity in sound.
Arts
fromKALTBLUT Magazine
3 days ago

Perceptrum and the Emergence of Augmented Painting: When the Canvas Begins to Listen - KALTBLUT Magazine

Perceptrum redefines painting by allowing touch, creating a sensory dialogue that transforms the relationship between observer and artwork.
London
fromwww.theguardian.com
6 days ago

I took off my headphones and noticed a stranger in peril

Wearing headphones isolates individuals from their surroundings, while being present enhances awareness and engagement with the world.
fromArchDaily
1 week ago

Architectures of the Gaze: 25 Viewpoints for Experiencing the Landscape

Viewpoints are structures designed for observing the landscape from elevated positions. They act as devices that organize the gaze and establish a direct relationship between the body and the territory.
Philosophy
fromWIRED
6 days ago

Meet the Man Making Music With His Brain Implant

Galen Buckwalter, a 69-year-old research psychologist and quadriplegic, participated in a brain implant study to contribute to science that aids those with paralysis. The six chips in his brain decode movement intention, allowing him to operate a computer and feel sensations in his fingers again.
Music production
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
4 days ago

Silent Minds: Exploring the Absence of Inner Speech

Inner speech varies among individuals, and not everyone experiences it, indicating diverse cognitive processes.
Berlin
fromFast Company
1 week ago

How distance changes perception: The making of an observer

Understanding the United States involves navigating complex cultural and institutional landscapes shaped by personal experiences and global interactions.
Renovation
fromArchDaily
2 weeks ago

"Echo of the ruins" Open-Air Museum of Sound and Memory / 1Y Architects

An open-air sound museum built from recycled factory ruins in Qingshuitan transforms a silent industrial area into a public space for listening and storytelling.
Yoga
fromYOGMAY
3 weeks ago

Sound Healing Teacher Training vs Sound Healing Course

Sound healing courses teach foundational principles of vibrational healing through sacred instruments and frequencies, while teacher training programs prepare practitioners to professionally instruct others in these techniques.
fromArchDaily
2 weeks ago

Spaces That Feel Back: How Buildings Respond to Human Behavior

Decades of research in environmental psychology and building science reveal that indoor conditions can profoundly affect human health and behavior. Lighting influences circadian rhythms and sleep patterns. Air quality impacts cognitive performance and respiratory health. Temperature and acoustics shape comfort and concentration.
Renovation
fromArchDaily
3 weeks ago

Designing the Sensory City: Architecture, Light Pollution, and Urban Noise

For most of human history, night arrived as a planetary certainty. Darkness spread across landscapes, and the sky revealed thousands of stars. Today, that sky is disappearing. Artificial light spills upward from cities, scattering through the atmosphere and turning night into a permanent haze. Research mapping global sky brightness shows that more than 80 percent of humanity now lives under light-polluted skies, and the Milky Way has vanished from view for over a third of the world's population.
Environment
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
2 weeks ago

Human vision: what we actually see - and don't see - tells us a lot about consciousness

Significant visual processing occurs unconsciously in the brain, as demonstrated by blindsight and inattentional blindness phenomena where people perceive visual information without conscious awareness.
Higher education
fromCornell Chronicle
3 weeks ago

World According to Sound offers immersive audio experience March 23 | Cornell Chronicle

The World According to Sound presents a blindfolded sonic experience exploring sound as a method of understanding and knowing across academic disciplines.
Medicine
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 weeks ago

A moment that changed me: I was planning to be a musician then I had my ears syringed

Sudden hearing loss and distorted sound perception following ear treatment led to a diagnosis of degenerative hearing loss that fundamentally altered a music student's life and career aspirations.
Health
fromPsychology Today
3 weeks ago

Health, Music, Executive Function, and Emotions

Medical crises heighten sensory awareness, making sounds and objects become emotionally charged memories that permanently alter how we perceive them.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
3 weeks ago

Music even makes you blink to the beat

Our eyes—which we usually think of as purely visual organs—spontaneously dance to the rhythm of what we hear, says study co-author Du Yi, a cognitive neuroscientist at the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Beijing. Using a high-speed eye-tracking system, Du and her team were stunned to discover nonmusicians instinctively blinking in sync with the beat structure of Bach chorales.
Berlin music
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
2 weeks ago

Music Provides Great Value to the Brain

Brain research reveals humans are genetically hardwired to respond emotionally to music because this ability supports evolutionary survival and procreation through enhanced prediction skills.
Miscellaneous
fromArchDaily
1 month ago

Mapping Space Without Sight: Inside SEAlab's Sensory Architecture

SEAlab designed a school for blind and visually impaired children by prioritizing spatial perception through observation, creating a simple geometric layout with a central courtyard as a navigational anchor.
fromThe Wire Magazine - Adventures In Modern Music
1 month ago

Robert Aiki Aubrey Lowe: Natural Decay and Reparative Noise - The Wire

End Of Summer features falsetto voices, bowed cello, feedback tones, synth drones and various electronics, blending and melting into each other's timbres. Robert Lowe is involved in "Part 1" and "Part 3", the latter with multi-tracked harmonic lines utilising nasal intonations to accent frequencies in waves of filtered resonance.
Film
Music
fromKALTBLUT Magazine
1 month ago

Dive into the Uncharted: personne Unveils New EP "attention economy" - KALTBLUT Magazine

Swiss trio personne debuts with 'attention economy' EP, critiquing digital culture through warm, analogue sound and exploring identity beyond visibility.
Psychology
fromThe Gottman Institute
2 weeks ago

What Is ASMR? The Science of Why Soft Sounds Calm Us Down

ASMR is a tingling relaxation response triggered by soft sounds and gentle attention, rooted in ancient social bonding behaviors predating modern terminology.
Wellness
fromDesign Milk
1 month ago

Emergence is a New Kind of Multi-Sensorial Wellness Experience

The wellness sector reaches $6.3 billion in 2023 with 7.3% annual growth through 2028, expanding beyond traditional treatments into neuroscience-based experiences like Kinda Studio's personalized meditative Emergence service.
fromdesignboom | architecture & design magazine
1 month ago

glass loudspeaker draws from uk grime music scene and brutalist architecture

The Eski.Sub draws inspiration from the visual language of Brutalist architecture and the cultural atmosphere of UK grime music scene. The project examines the relationship between design, urban context, and emotional listening experiences, positioning the loudspeaker as both an audio device and a spatial object.
Design
fromHarvard Gazette
1 month ago

Audiobooks don't really count as reading? Think again. - Harvard Gazette

The neural networks that process written and oral language are deeply intertwined and largely overlap when reading print books or listening to audiobooks. There isn't much of a difference between the brain network for reading and the brain network for language comprehension. The brain area we call the 'letter box,' which processes print, is not as engaged when you listen, but it has been shown that when some people listen to words, they visualize them, so the letter box gets activated as well.
Education
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

Can you solve it? You won't believe these optical illusions!

The illusion is the latest masterpiece from Olivier Redon, a French-American inventor, who has had his creations used in museums and on TV programmes around the world. For today's puzzles, I present five of Redon's most brilliant images. The challenge is to figure out how he managed to create them.
Photography
fromSilicon Canals
3 weeks ago

People who can't walk through a store without running their fingers along every surface aren't being childish - they learned early that the world only felt real when their body confirmed it because the emotional information they received from people was never reliable enough to trust - Silicon Canals

For many of us, that compulsive need to touch isn't about poor impulse control. It's about confirmation. It's about making sure the world around us is real, solid, tangible - because somewhere along the line, we learned that the emotional landscape we navigated wasn't.
Psychology
Roam Research
fromNature
1 month ago

The squeal of peeling tape, explained

Micro-cracks in adhesive tape's adhesive layer generate weak shock waves that produce the screeching sound when tape is unspooled from its roll.
fromColossal
1 month ago

Radioposter Launches Paper-fi: Analog Books with Synchronized Soundtracks

Radioposter has built what it calls Paper-fi: physical books with synchronized audio soundtracks that follow readers in real time as they turn each page. No chips embedded in the paper, no QR codes to scan. The system uses patented computer vision and other modes through a smartphone or smart glasses to track your place in the book and play the corresponding audio.
Arts
fromFast Company
1 month ago

These sounds could soothe your restless brain

I'm very sensitive to sound, so the smallest noises can be distracting. Silence is sometimes loud for me. After the diagnosis, Sussman's parents switched him to a school that specialized in helping students with learning differences. His mom also started playing brown noise to help him relax or fall asleep, after she read that low-frequency (lo-fi), deep rumbling sounds-like heavy machinery or strong rainfall-can soothe those with ADHD.
Music production
Parenting
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Stress Relief Through Sound

Music therapy reduces anxiety and stress in new parents while improving emotional coping and positive experiences during perinatal care.
fromHarvard Gazette
1 month ago

'The sound stopped suddenly' - Harvard Gazette

The sound stopped suddenly. I wanted to use my right foot to hit the drum twice, but I ended with the first try. At that instant, my brain really drew a blank. I thought, 'What's going on?' This was Yamaguchi's recollection of the first symptoms of musician's dystonia that appeared during a concert in 2009, marking the beginning of his five-year journey to diagnosis.
Music
Music production
from48 hills
1 month ago

The Audium thrums with Pamela Z's factory-sampling 'Arbeitsklang' - 48 hills

Composer Pamela Z creates immersive sound installation Arbeitsklang by recording industrial worksites across Germany and layering the sounds with her voice and live-MIDI manipulations in a 176-speaker theater.
Design
fromCurbed
1 month ago

There's Not Enough Noise in 'Art of Noise'

The Cooper Hewitt's Art of Noise exhibition chronicles over a century of music technology design, primarily tracing the evolution of portable music devices from gramophones to modern formats.
UX design
fromArchDaily
1 month ago

Smart Booking Systems as a Tool for Acoustic Space Efficiency

Balance flexible, short-term use and personalization with efficient scheduling to make acoustic pods productive, well-utilized, and user-centered.
Podcast
fromRAIN News
1 month ago

A landscape of listening

Podcasting in the U.S. continues significant growth, reaching diverse demographics—especially ages 25–44, males, Black and Hispanic listeners—with strong crossover between listening and watching.
Science
fromMail Online
1 month ago

Mysterious spikes in Earth's 'heartbeat' are scrambling human brains

Earth's Schumann Resonance has shown recent elevated spikes linked to space weather, but biological effects on mood and cognition remain unproven.
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Accomplishment Hallucination: When the Tool Uses You

Accomplishment Hallucination is a cognitive state in which speed feels like competence, output feels like accomplishment, and work feels done when the actual work-the thinking-through, the failure-mode analysis, the sitting with uncertainty until the problem reveals its structure-hasn't happened at all. Physics need not apply. AI can create a similar state in waking life—literally, as your very words assume form before your eyes like a conjuring sorcerer. But, like real life, the code may be buggier than we realize.
Artificial intelligence
Data science
fromNature
2 months ago

Science finds its song

Scientists are translating research data into music, fostering interdisciplinary collaboration, revealing patterns, and increasing accessibility through data-driven music events.
Science
fromTheregister
1 month ago

Sound cues steered dreams and improved puzzle-solving

Timed sound cues during sleep (targeted memory reactivation) can prompt dream content and double next-morning puzzle-solving rates for some participants.
Writing
fromThe Walrus
2 months ago

Harmonics | The Walrus

A caregiver comforts a dying loved one amid a surreal, glittering ambulance and ER, balancing narcotics, music, storytelling, and tender presence.
fromEntrepreneur
1 month ago

AI Is Changing Music Production - But It Can't Fill Creative Gaps

We tend to think AI music tools are just gimmicks for social media creators, or that they're limited to basic beats. But it's hard to dismiss them when companies like Google, Meta and Stability AI are pouring resources into generative audio models that can produce full compositions in seconds.
Music production
fromYanko Design - Modern Industrial Design News
2 months ago

Teenage Engineering-inspired Music Sampler Uses AI In The Nerdiest Way Possible - Yanko Design

Junho Park's graduation concept borrows all the right cues from TE's playbook, that modular control layout, the single bold color, the mix of knobs and buttons that practically beg to be touched, but redirects them toward a gap in the market. Where Teenage Engineering designs for people who already understand synthesis and sampling, the T.M-4 targets people who have ideas but no vocabulary to express them.
Gadgets
fromInverse
2 months ago

Do Sounds Really Help Us To Sleep?

When we say that someone has "slept soundly," what do we mean? Basically, we mean that someone slept well, but the sound part is interesting, since in the 21st century, there's a whole subset of our culture obsessed with using soundscapes, music, and sleep stories to either fall asleep more easily, or, in a more dubious claim, to promote better sleep.
Mindfulness
Science
fromwww.npr.org
1 month ago

Baby chicks link certain sounds with shapes, just like humans do

Both humans and newly hatched chicks associate the nonsense word "bouba" with roundness and "kiki" with spikiness, suggesting an innate cross-species sound-shape mapping.
Mental health
fromNature
2 months ago

Daily briefing: What people with no 'mind's eye' can tell us about consciousness

Vividness of mental imagery, handwriting practices, psychiatric-diagnostic revisions, and emerging brain–computer interfaces shape memory, creativity, education, mental-health classification, and technology development.
Marketing
fromThe Drum
2 months ago

The Audio Impact: Messaging that works

Audio advertising leverages streaming and mobile habits to align messages with listeners' activities and moods, creating an effective creative canvas for brands.
SF music
from48 hills
2 months ago

Alexi Kenney packs nocturnal energy, psychedelic fantasy into SoundBox - 48 hills

SoundBox presents an immersive, late‑night multimedia music experience combining surround sound, entrancing visuals, theatrical performance, and cocktails in a casual lounge atmosphere.
Miscellaneous
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

Does the temperature affect the sound of snow underfoot?

Snow underfoot produces different sounds that correlate with temperature: squelch near 0°C, crunch above −10°C, and high-pitched squeaks well below −10°C.
fromFast Company
1 month ago

This AI-powered machine turns photos into smells

One scientist at MIT, Cyrus Clarke, is working to do just that. Alongside a team of fellow researchers, Clarke has developed a physical machine called the Anemoia Device, which uses a generative AI model to analyze an archival photograph, describe it in a short sentence, and, following the user's own inputs, convert that description into a unique fragrance. The word "anemoia" was coined by author John Koenig and included in his 2021 book, The Dictionary of Obscure Sorrows.
Artificial intelligence
Arts
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

The Tension Between Belonging and Becoming Captured in Music

Live theater transforms viewers into participants, making timeless stories of tradition, loss, and resilience feel immediate and deeply personal.
Podcast
from99% Invisible
2 months ago

Audio Flux - 99% Invisible

Audio Flux revives short-form experimental audio by providing biannual themed challenges that produce bold, three-minute stories and renewed visibility for the format.
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Music and the Brain: Love in the Key of Everyday Life

Wooden spoons as microphones, siblings spinning in socks across the floor, a mother laughing as Whitney Houston's "I Wanna Dance With Somebody" fills the room for the third time in a row-this is love. Long before children understand romance, they learn connection this way, through synchronized movement, shared joy, and the safety of familiar songs. Research on rhythm and social bonding suggests that moving in time together can regulate the nervous system and strengthen feelings of connection.
Music
Mindfulness
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

How Listening to the Sound of Feathers Can Awaken True Joy

Attentive connection with nature nurtures creativity, compassion, and joy, fostering respect for nonhuman life and inspiring gentler, more flourishing communities.
Gadgets
fromDesign Milk
2 months ago

Nightclub-Inspired Speaker Is Transparent in Name and Assembly

Transparent Speaker x LN-CC blends LN-CC's 1970s rippled glass aesthetic with Transparent's modular, circular 120W Bluetooth speaker design for event-ready club atmospheres.
Science
fromFast Company
2 months ago

Neuroscience just discovered a weird way to tell when someone is really listening to you

People blink less when they concentrate harder on listening, so decreased blink rate can indicate attentive listening.
Podcast
from99% Invisible
2 months ago

Audio Flux - 99% Invisible

Audio Flux revives short-form experimental audio by hosting twice-yearly themed challenges that showcase three-minute stories and broaden podcast storytelling possibilities.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
2 months ago

Loving Attention and Aesthetic Appreciation

Aesthetic attention that silences the self can cultivate the patient, clear vision required for genuine loving relationships.
Music
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Engage Actively With Music to Reap Its Greatest Benefits

The ukulele is an accessible, increasingly popular instrument that people of nearly any age and skill level can learn and play in local clubs.
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Hyperphantasia: When Imagination Is as Vivid as Real Life

Close your eyes and picture an apple. Most people see something-a faint, slightly blurry image, less vivid than a real apple. A few, however, will see it as clearly as if it were sitting right in front of them. This ability is called hyperphantasia. Hyperphantasia, literally meaning "beyond imagination," refers to exceptionally vivid mental imagery. It is often described as the opposite of aphantasia, a condition in which people report little or no ability to form mental images.
Psychology
Design
fromdesign-milk.com
2 months ago

CONTRIBUTIONS Pairs Objects With Soundscapes in Paris

Sound operates as a structural element in exhibitions, making objects interactive instruments that reshape perception and connect craft traditions across time.
Science
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

How Music Enhances Our Brains and Our Lives

Music training strengthens brain rhythms and learning increases synthesis of proteins necessary for memory, supporting neuroplasticity and resilience against age-related decline.
Arts
fromwww.npr.org
2 months ago

'Sound of Falling' is a hypnotic history of German rural life

Sound of Falling traces four German girls across generations on one farm, revealing intergenerational trauma, liminality, and a folk-horror sense of ghostlike haunting.
Music
fromThe Atlantic
1 month ago

Is AI Ruining Music?

Streaming economics, algorithmic recommendations, and generative AI commodify music, reduce artist revenue, and threaten creative control and discovery.
Design
fromDesign Milk
2 months ago

MIRORlab Taps into the Emotional Dimensions of Light

MIRORLab's MIROR Collection uses slow 360° rotation and calibrated color moods to create meditative, nature-inspired lighting that reduces digital overstimulation.
Psychology
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

I see sounds as shapes. Synaesthesia has given me an extraordinary ability for languages

Auditory-visual synaesthesia produces vivid visual imagery from sound, facilitating exceptional language learning but complicating everyday tasks like driving with loud music.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 month ago

Speech sounds are a blurhere's how your brain sorts them out

High-gamma brain-wave power drops about 100 milliseconds after word boundaries, marking word endings and tracking native-language fluency.
Music
fromDefector
2 months ago

'The Disintegration Loops' Are Music's Loveliest Death | Defector

Ambient tape loops progressively decay during repeated playback, transforming music into a deteriorating, memory-like sound.
#earworms
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Why Your Eyes Like What Your Eyes Like

Real estate with ocean views, stunning mountain vistas, and wide-open green spaces sell at premium prices because humans find those settings pleasing [1-5]. Certain color combinations in fashion-such as brown and forest green-blend harmoniously, while others, such as hot pink and orange, clash. And our eyes like certain proportions in visual objects (like buildings and human faces) but not others.
Science
Music
fromKALTBLUT Magazine
1 month ago

Choosing the Artificial Over the Real in Dash Hammerstein's "Noise Machine" - KALTBLUT Magazine

Dash Hammerstein blends Americana songwriting and filmmaking to create intimate, melody-driven songs and film scores that mix folk-pop sensibility with subtle production flourishes.
Music
fromThe New Yorker
1 month ago

What a Rare Condition Can Teach Us About the Power of Music

Some people with musical anhedonia cannot feel pleasure from music, offering insight into how the brain processes musical emotion and perception.
Music
fromTNW | Music
2 months ago

Can AI replace the humanity of Classical Music?

AI can analyze compositional style and complete unfinished works, prompting questions about whether technology can replicate human sensitivity and emotional interpretation in classical music.
Psychology
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

Having synaesthesia is a lot like being a twin we don't know any different

Twin sisters experience visual synaesthesia where sounds, tastes, smells, words and personalities appear as distinct colours and textures, with individual differences despite shared genetics.
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

I see time as a grid in my mind. I remember the birthdays of friends I haven't seen for 65 years

Did someone with spatial-sequence synaesthesia design the calendar app on mobile phones? Because that's how time and dates look in my brain. If you say a date to me, that day appears in a grid diagram in my head, and it shows if that box is already imprinted with a holiday, event or someone's birthday. Public holidays and special events like Christmas and Easter are already imprinted for the year, and the diagram goes backwards to about 100,000BC
Psychology
Music
fromBon Appetit
2 months ago

Listening Bars Are the Analog Sanctuary Our Social Lives Need Right Now

Listening rooms like Commune offer communal, intentional music-centered spaces that comfort and connect people seeking deeper musical experiences after pandemic isolation.
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