People with musical anhedonia do not enjoy music but still feel the urge to move. Movement itself may generate pleasure.
The pleasurable urge to move to music -- to groove -- appears to be a physiological response independent of how much we generally enjoy music, according to a new article. That groove response is so ...
A new study finds that the urge to move to music—known as groove—is a distinct physiological response, separate from musical ...
The pleasurable urge to move to music—to groove—appears to be a physiological response independent of how much we generally ...
This study examined the important question of how neurons code temporal information across the hippocampus, dorsal striatum, and orbitofrontal cortex. Using a behavioral task in the rat that requires ...
Scientists discovered that the earliest ecdysozoans likely had a single ventral nerve cord, with paired cords evolving independently in some groups. Fossil evidence links nerve cord evolution to body ...
Recent pathway tracing experiments reveal a convergence of those sites onto a third region, the ventral portion of the intermediate arcopallium (AIV), suggesting that AIV may also play an important ...
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