Bock (2010) studied the relationship between sensory movement adaptation and gentle music. The blog conducted a quantitative study including 36 participants. He tried to evaluate whether "This Mozart effect exceeds cognitive tasks including sensory-motor adaptability" (Bock, 2010, p. 737). Bock tested this by emotional self-assessment before playing the music, began to adapt to the task on the tablet, began acclimating after completing 12 adapts.
CLASTST (Classical Background Music Test) and POPTST (Popular Background Music Test), to determine the influence of music listening style scores and background music state, is a combination of music listening style I returned the score and CONTST (control). There is no BGM in the test. Table 2 shows variable tags. Table 3 and Table 4 show the results of two regression analyzes. The results show that under classical or general listening conditions, music listening style variables do not have a statistically significant effect on test score differences. CONTST has a statistically significant effect on the two dependent variables. This may indicate that people good at mathematics can learn mathematics well under BGM conditions.
The meta-analysis investigates over 30 studies to explain the overall concept and impact of the Mozart effect. These studies discovered that those who listened to classical music increased the IQ score of the Stanford-Binet IQ battery. This IQ score change is caused by a specific intelligence category in the exam. This is an element of time and space. The temporal and spatial elements of intelligence include efforts to transform mental images without a physical model. Listening to classical music like Mozart used in these studies will only affect the intellectual part of the processing of the temporal and spatial components; in this case the spatiotemporal measurement scores in the IQ test are higher, And the total score of the IQ test is improved.
Have you heard that everyone listens to classical concerts to make people smarter (Mozart effect) And are you wondering whether this is true? If that is true, have you ever thought about it, why is it true? When we were looking for an answer, we immediately typed Google on our computer and investigated; but you read at least once to see if you read the statistics or summary section Or just below. This often happens. When studying whether classical music can make people more intelligent, they usually understand only a specific part of the research, and can really understand the meaning of the research results without understanding what the whole research is trying to convey We make quick decisions without having to understand. For example, many people read classical concerts to improve the score of a test in a particular IQ exam, so we believe that classical concerts will be smarter.