Ep 28: Why songs get stuck in our heads

Ep 28: Why songs get stuck in our heads

Up next

Ep 44: Doing something when nothing can be done: Working with Huntington's disease

Living with a life-limiting condition comes with a plethora of psychological consequences. When the condition is rare, having psychologists in your corner can mean even more. This episode, we speak with Dr Sarah Gunn, Lecturer at the University of Leicester and expert on the psyc ...  Show more

Ep 43: Psychology on the Menu

Join Dr Jon Sutton and Dr Andrea Oskis (Food Writer and Senior Lecturer at Middlesex University, London) for a research-packed feast, through which they navigate the deep and meaningful connections between us and the food we eat. From appetiser to dessert, every dish opens the do ...  Show more

Recommended Episodes

Why is this song stuck in my head?
CrowdScience

You have probably experienced an ‘earworm’ - a catchy bit of music that plays round and round in your head and won’t go away – at least for a short while. But why did it pop up in the first place and how did it get stuck?

CrowdScience listener Ryota in Japan wants us to ...

  Show more

How music, memory and emotion are connected, with Elizabeth Margulis, PhD
Speaking of Psychology

The right song can make us feel chills, help pull us out of a bad mood, or take us back in time to the first time we heard it. Elizabeth Margulis, PhD, director of the Music Cognition Lab at Princeton University, talks about how music, memory, emotion and imagination intertwine; ...  Show more

Hiding in Plain Sight: Introducing Psychoanalysis
Philosophy of Psychoanalysis

How we are strangers to ourselves. This lecture addresses the questions raised by psychoanalysis; the movement of Freud's thought over time; symptoms, repression and trauma; dreams; and psychoanalytic genres. Contact Email: philosophyofpsychoanalysis@gmail.com Lecturer: Asso ...  Show more

A year in music science: wonder, volume and animals that groove
Short Wave

As 2023 comes to a close, Short Wave teamed up with our friends at All Things Considered to round up some of our favorite stories of the year — this time, about the science behind music. First, science correspondent Rob Stein talks to researchers (and Phish's Mike Gordon) about w ...  Show more