music a universal languagemusic is universal-it is produced by all cultures. Some scientists believe that music came before speech and arose as development of mating calls. in fact, there is one theory that the earliest languages were chanted or sung rather than spoken. Indeed, in some cultures, music is a form of recording history. the aboriginal australians, for example, use music as means to pass on stories of the land and spirits to the next generation. new evidence suggests that music does not just satisfy the feel-good factor but it is also good for the brain. a study of intellectually disable children showed that they could recall more information after it was given to them in a song than after it was read to them as a storyresearchers also report that people achieve better on a standard intelligence test after listening to mozart. the so called the mozart effect has also been supported by findings that rats brought up on mozart run faster through a complex network of paths or passages known as maze. overall it seems that in most instances people who suffer from any form of mental illness benefit from listening to music
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