Listening to certain pieces of classical music can “enhance spatial–temporal tasks involving mental imagery and temporal ordering.”
These are audio patterns primarily created for pleasure. Perhaps this is a necessary component of making them work. However if they are not this opens up a new interesting field of investigation into synthesised audio (music ect.) and visual patterns specifically designed for enhancing performance on certain tasks or perhaps even g in general.
Also let me emphasise that currently the science seems to be leaning towards this being mostly an artefact of mood and arousal and even so just for specific tasks. If this is true this would make the search for new and stronger patterns more difficult, since the space has been much more explored. But I suppose a large space of pleasurable music hasn’t been explored for these effects so this may be low hanging fruit never the less.
Listening to certain pieces of classical music can “enhance spatial–temporal tasks involving mental imagery and temporal ordering.”
These are audio patterns primarily created for pleasure. Perhaps this is a necessary component of making them work. However if they are not this opens up a new interesting field of investigation into synthesised audio (music ect.) and visual patterns specifically designed for enhancing performance on certain tasks or perhaps even g in general.
Also let me emphasise that currently the science seems to be leaning towards this being mostly an artefact of mood and arousal and even so just for specific tasks. If this is true this would make the search for new and stronger patterns more difficult, since the space has been much more explored. But I suppose a large space of pleasurable music hasn’t been explored for these effects so this may be low hanging fruit never the less.