Science Friday - Music’s Emotional Power Can Shape Memories—And Your Perception Of Time

Episode Date: December 25, 2023

It can be hard to avoid the chime of classic Christmas songs at this time of year. Certain songs may even bring up potent memories, transporting a person to a specific moment in the past, like an afte...rnoon baking cookies as a child, or warming up after playing in the snow.Music, when coupled with emotion, has the ability to create powerful memories. And listening to songs associated with specific memories can almost feel like going back in time.Better understanding how this mechanism works is the work of Assistant Professor Dr. David Clewett and PhD candidate Mason McClay, both in UCLA’s cognitive psychology department. They talk with SciFri producer Kathleen Davis about how this method could be used to improve therapies for PTSD and other memory disorders.Transcripts for this segment will be available the week after the show airs on sciencefriday.com. Subscribe to this podcast. Plus, to stay updated on all things science, sign up for Science Friday's newsletters.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:03 Have you ever felt like you've been on an emotional roller coaster listening to music? It might go from a really joyous segment to a more anxious segment. It's almost like telling a story. It's Monday, December 25th, and Oh, ho! Ho! Today is Science Friday! I'm sci-fright producer Kathleen Davis. Music has this incredible ability to bring us back to a memory that's been hidden deep inside our brains. Have you ever wondered what the science is behind?
Starting point is 00:00:37 that. Two researchers at UCLA's Department of Cognitive Psychology are trying to crack that code. It turns out that by listening to music that manipulates our emotions, we're more likely to form strong memories while listening to those tracks. Joining me now are Dr. David Cluitt, assistant professor of cognitive psychology at UCLA in Los Angeles, and Mason McClay, PhD candidate in Cognitive Psychology, also at UCLA. Thank you both so much for joining me. Thank you. So David, let's start generally by talking about how we make memories. So what is the process that's going on in our brains? Yeah. So even though we're encountering this continuous stream of information, when we look back on our experiences, we tend to remember them as these discrete episodes or
Starting point is 00:01:26 events. So our memories are organized more like chapters in a story rather than some boundless text. And so what we've been finding in our lab is that there's this push and pull in terms of the context that people are experiencing. So whether you remain in the same space for a period of time or cross into a new context that can elicit what we call segmentation or the formation of these distinct episodes in your long-term memory. And so Mason, how does music play into memory making? Yeah, great question. So as they've mentioned, this event segmentation process has mainly been investigated by using perceptual or external contextual changes in our environment. environment. But we are actually really interested in how emotional change might also be a part of this
Starting point is 00:02:12 really rich episodic memory formation process. So we thought about using music as a way to push and pull or push around different emotional states so that we could test whether or not the change in emotion might also facilitate the episodic encoding or the segmentation of memories. So walk me through this study that you did. I mean, And what were you actually trying to learn here? Yeah, great question. So in this study, we actually worked with composers to write original pieces of music. And the reason why we did this is because we wanted to try to elicit different emotional states that changed over time.
Starting point is 00:02:53 And so what participants did is they listened to this rich music while looking at different images. And then we tested their memories for the images, but we didn't just ask them whether or not they remembered an image. we asked them how much time they thought passed between pairs of images. And what we were interested in looking at is how people separate these images and memory. So what we saw is that if images spanned an intense emotional change elicited by the music, then their memory actually seemed to dilate. So they remembered more time passing compared to images that stayed within one emotional event. Okay, so let's take a listen to one of the,
Starting point is 00:03:35 music cues that you played for people. And I want our listeners to really pay attention to the change that's going to happen about halfway through and how it makes them feel. Okay, so let's talk about that music because at first it's pretty triumphant and joyous. And then it gets really scary. Is that change that I noticed, that shift in emotion, what you were looking at as being important informing memories. Exactly. So your emotions are ebbing and flowing over time and that transition between one state of intense feelings or negativity to something perhaps slightly more positive is good for the formation of new memories. We know this promotes new encoding. What you're essentially doing is crossing through an emotional doorway into an entirely new event.
Starting point is 00:05:24 So did you find that your participants were forming memories based on sitting in a chair and listening to this music and looking at pictures? Yeah. Yeah, so not only did we find that our participants tended to have a temporal dilation of images that spanned an emotional change, what's really interesting is that we actually tested a day later how well they remembered each image. And what we found is that when an image coincided with a rich emotional change, then they remembered that image better. And we also found that participants remembered the temporal location
Starting point is 00:06:08 of those images that coincided with a change better as well. And the rich emotional change seemed to be better for that memory process than just a mere perceptual change of the music itself. Mason, did you find that people's memory making was different based on if that music change was maybe from, you know, sad to happy or happy to sad or anxiety-inducing, were there different genres of this music that worked better? Yeah, that's a great question. And that was one of our really cool findings, I think, is we actually found that the segmentation process was strongest when the emotional state was going from a more neutral
Starting point is 00:06:49 state, like calm to a more negative state, like an anxious clip. But if it was becoming less negative, so going from maybe. be anxious to sad or anxious to calm, memory actually tended to integrate. And what I mean by that is people remembered time as actually being more compressed when it was going from more negative to less negative. It's so amazing to me that people can glean the same emotions from music, you know, person by person. That just seemed like such an amazing part of this as well. Yeah, absolutely. And I just wanted to mention, too, that we developed a new tool for this experiment that we call the emotion compass, which is basically a tool that measures people's emotions on two dimensions,
Starting point is 00:07:30 so how pleasant the music made them feel or how anxious or aroused. And what's great about this tool is we're able to collect continuous measures of emotions from moment to moment to really capture how they're fluctuating across time. And even though we design the musical segments to evoke categorical emotions like joyous or anxious, we're actually letting their ratings tell us how they were feeling. So while a sad song might actually be very pleasurable for one person, it could induce negativity to another person. So we didn't want to make assumptions about what people were feeling. What is it about music that makes it such a powerful tool for molding memories?
Starting point is 00:08:11 So we have a few different metaphors we play around with, but one of them is music is a very rich context. As they've mentioned, it's highly structured. It's also often formed in It's sort of a narrative format. So like the music that you played earlier, Kathleen, it might go from a really joyous segment to a more anxious segment. It's almost like telling a story. Like a character had something really good happen to them, and then all of a sudden something shifts, right?
Starting point is 00:08:39 So in that way, these changes almost act like putting things into storage for us. We have this joy event, then we have this sad event. But what's kind of cool is this narrative component allows us to take these different events, and then put them together so that we can more easily tell a story across time. Can this explain Mason why, say, going to a concert, for example, can create such lasting memories? Yeah, I think so. So this study was people just alone at home on their computers, but I think that going to a concert, there's a very social component to that that I think probably helps drive these emotional fluctuations. Because not only are you experiencing the vividness of live music,
Starting point is 00:09:29 but you're also able to see and perceive your favorite band while they're playing this music, you're able to share that experience with the people around you. So I think all of these different elements really amplify the emotional context and also the change across maybe within a song or across songs and make that just a very vivid memory for you. Another strong example of this, too, is when you think about the score to a movie, The music itself and the emotions they evoke is a storyteller. That's something that helps you remember these really exciting moments or sad moments in a film.
Starting point is 00:10:04 Yeah, that's a great point. So there have been studies in the past that show that in patients with dementia or Alzheimer's or other kind of memory conditions, music can trigger old memories and even boost mood. I mean, that is so incredible to me. Is that just another piece of this puzzle into one? why music and memory is so powerful? Yeah, well, we know music has a very special place in memory, but so does emotion. So those moods that music tends to induce serve as a really strong memory cue. So we're attaching this really vivid information to a target piece of a memory. So when you
Starting point is 00:10:44 listen to that music later on, it could reinstate those same emotions. And that could be a pathway to unlocking these memories that would otherwise be dormant. Could either of you see music therapy, maybe something similar to this study that you've done recently, as a way to treat conditions that are tied to memory. I'm thinking like PTSD or something, David. Yeah, that's a great question. So PTSD is characterized by highly disorganized and fragmented memories. So people who experience intense trauma often have trouble recalling the temporal order of events and making sense of what happened to them. So really, the goal of potential, therapies is to try to reintegrate those memories and put the pieces back together so that people
Starting point is 00:11:29 can comprehend a negative event that happened to them and then embed it within a broader context, such as the story of their life. So we're hopeful that maybe music by eliciting positive emotions or at least moving people from a very negative state to a more neutral state can help recontextualize their memories and form these narratives that help them understand what happened and begin to heal. I have had moments where I'm listening to live music and I'm having a great time, and it almost feels like time slows down. Is that like a real phenomenon, Mason? Does this happen to other people? Yeah. So actually, there's a really interesting literature on time perception and emotion that seems to be a little different from the literature on temporal memory and emotion.
Starting point is 00:12:19 But what's kind of interesting, you know the classical idiom of time flies when you're having fun. So it seems like when you're in a really aroused and positive state, time actually seems to speed up. And what's also kind of funny is that when you're bored and there's not much going on, time seems to be really slow. But that's in the moment. So that's what we call perceived time or perspective time. But what's cool is that if you look back on those memories, the memories that are more rich in emotion, So the concert you had a ton of fun at feels longer. So in the moment, if you try to really put yourself back in that moment, it might have felt really fast.
Starting point is 00:12:59 But it's your memory of the fun concert that feels long. Is it possible that other types of art may affect memory in a similar way? Like, I don't know, looking at a beautiful painting or something, David. Is that something that's been explored? That's really great question. You know, if something is capable of inducing emotions, then, you know, those emotions are going to ripple across time and change. And that's going to color the way you process information as time unfolds. So I think it makes sense that as you navigate, say, through a museum and you're experiencing these different pieces of artwork that evoke different emotions, you may be better able to integrate that experience together if they're evoking something very positive and arousing.
Starting point is 00:13:43 What is next for your research into this? What would you really love to learn in the future, David? Yeah, so there's this idea in emotion research that people who lack emotional flexibility, so an inability to mount an appropriate emotional response to a situation often exhibit symptoms of depression or PTSD. So we're really interested in assessing using our compass tool, how people navigate their emotional landscapes and how effectively they transition between these different emotional states. We suspect that that would be a really good measure of whether people are amenable to treatment and also to assess whether they may have depression or PTSD. So we're really excited to use this tool in new ways. Mason, what about you? What would you love to be able to learn next about this. Yeah, so we're actually in the middle of collecting data
Starting point is 00:14:39 for that emotion compass project right now. It's pretty exciting. We have this new mobile app that we're using the same music and people are just tracking their emotions on their phone. What's kind of cool about it is emotional flexibility seems to be potentially symptomatic of depression or PTSD. But it also, as we found in our study is important for the segmentation integration process. So people who have maybe worse emotional flexibility, maybe don't transition across emotional states as well, might also have showed these deficits in more episodic memory. So that's something I'm really interested in falling up on. That's all the time that we have for now. I would like to thank my guests, Dr. David Cluett,
Starting point is 00:15:26 assistant professor of cognitive psychology at UCLA in Los Angeles. And, Mason McLeigh, PhD candidate in cognitive psychology, also at UCLA. Thank you both so much for joining me today. Thanks, Kathleen. Thank you. And listeners, we want to hear from you. Is there a song that triggers a specific memory for you? Let us know on your preferred social media site, our handle is always at SciFri.
Starting point is 00:15:56 That's all the time that we have for now. A lot of folks help make the show happen, including... Rasha Aireti. D. Peter Schmidt. Sandy Roberts. Shoshana Bucksbaum. And many more. Tomorrow will bring you a look into the complicated world of panda politics.
Starting point is 00:16:13 But for now, I'm SciFri producer Kathleen Davis. Happy holidays.

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