Tuesday, 8 November 2011

What triggers an Earworm - the song that's stuck in your head?

PYT was triggered by the letters EYC 
The brain has its own jukebox. A personal sound system for your private listening pleasure. The downside is that it has a mind of its own. It often chooses the songs and it frequently gets stuck, playing a particular tune over and over until you're sick of it. Psychologists have nicknamed these mental tunes "earworms" (from the German Ohrwurm). A study from 2009 found that they can last anywhere between minutes to hours, but that they're only unpleasant in a minority of cases. Now a team led by Victoria Williamson, in partnership with BBC 6 Music and other international radio stations, has surveyed thousands of people to try to find out the various triggers that cause earworms to start playing. Radio listeners and web visitors were invited to fill in an online form or email the station about their latest earworm experience and the circumstances that preceded it.

Just over 600 participants provided all the information that was needed for a detailed analysis. Predictably, the most frequently cited circumstance was recent exposure to a particular song. "My bloody earworm is that bloody George Harrison song you played yesterday," one 6 Music listener wrote in. "Woke at 4.30 this morning with it going round me head. PLEASE DON'T EVER PLAY IT AGAIN." In relation to this kind of earworm-inducing exposure, the survey revealed the manifold ways that we come into contact with music in modern life, including: music in public places, in gyms, restaurants and shops; radio music; live music; ring tones; another person's humming or singing; and music played in visual media on TV and on the Internet.

However, a song doesn't have to be heard to worm its way inside your head. Many listeners described how earworms had been triggered by association - contact with certain people, rhythms, situations, sounds or words - sometimes with quite obscure links. "On my journey, I read a number plate on a car that ended in the letters 'EYC' which is NOTHING LIKE 'PYT' (by Michael Jackson)," said another listener, "but for some unknown reason, there it was - the song was in my head."

Memories also triggered earworms - for example, driving along the same stretch of road that a song was first heard. And also anticipation. Another listener had "Alive" by Pearl Jam stuck in their head in the days before attending a Pearl Jam concert.

Mood and stress were other triggers. "Prokofiev 'Montagues and Capulets' opening theme. I was writing an email about a distressing subject. I suspect the mood of the piece matched my mood at the time," said an amateur musician. Another listener had Michael Jackson's Man in the Mirror playing in her mind ever since she'd been thinking about the star non-stop and feeling sad (the survey coincided with his death in 2009).

A final theme to emerge from the survey was the way that earworms start playing when we're in a "low attention state", bored or even asleep. "My earworm is 'Mulder and Scully' by Catatonia. In fact I dreamt about running through woods and this was the sound track in my head," said a 6 Music listener. Another survey respondent experienced K'naan "Waving Flag" when mind wandering through a monotonous lab task.

Theoretically, Williamson and her colleagues said earworms can be understood as another manifestation of what Ebbinghaus in the nineteenth century identified as "involuntary memory retrieval". They could even provide a new window through which to study that phenomenon.

"While musical imagery is a skill that many (especially musicians) can utilise to their advantage, involuntary musical imagery (INMI) is an involuntary, spontaneous, cognitive intrusion that, while not necessarily unpleasant or worrying, can prove hard to control," the researchers concluded. "The present study has classified the breadth of circumstances associated with the onset of an INMI episode in everyday life and provided insights into the origins of the pervasive phenomenon, as well as an illustration of how these different contexts might interact."

What about you? What earworms have you experienced lately and what was the context? Please use comments to share your earworm experiences.
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ResearchBlogging.orgWilliamson, V., Jilka, S., Fry, J., Finkel, S., Mullensiefen, D., and Stewart, L. (2011). How do "earworms" start? Classifying the everyday circumstances of Involuntary Musical Imagery Psychology of Music DOI: 10.1177/0305735611418553

Link to Earwormery, the website used by the authors of this study to survey participants' experiences.
Link to previous Digest item on earworms, "A natural history of the Earworm - the song that won't get out of your head."
Link to previous Digest item: "Hearing music that isn't there."

Post written by Christian Jarrett for the BPS Research Digest.

26 comments:

  1. I get Ella Fitzgerald's version of Stormy Weather in my head at least once a day and have done for about 5 years! At one time when I was in hospital and there was no music, that particular song went round and round in my head for three weeks, constantly. Very strange.

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  2. I've often gone to bed with a certain song in my head and woken up with it still going. It doesn't bother me, luckily, but it does give me pause to think I could have been mentally repeating a short fragment from a song (it is pretty much always a fragment, not the whole song) all night!

    Also, looking after a young child I can tell you that nursery rhymes are extremely earworm-y. Not sure whether inherently or because I'm singing them to my daughter several times a day, but regardless they sure are catchy.

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  3. Psychologists have nicknamed these mental tunes "earworms".

    As German colleagues of mine (I seem to have had a few!) would note, the term "earworm" is a German borrowing, not a psychological coining. The original term is "Ohrwurm" - I heard this some years ago and was intrigued, glad that someone's started to take a systematic interest.

    Also...

    May I advance a corollary to the axiomatic existence of earworms? I have often tried to get rid of one earworm (once it has become sufficiently irritating) by bringing conscious attention to another tune. This is only sometimes effective, and I submit that there is a spectrum of 'catchiness' such that a tune can only replace an earworm if it is more catchy. I'd like to suggest an ordinal scale onto which tunes could be mapped according to catchiness, and further suggest that this be called the Bacharach Scale in honour of that writer of catchy melodies.

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  4. Thanks Alasdair - good point re the term earworm (the authors of the current study did explain the etymology but I forgot). I've added that note in.

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  5. While digging over the garden recently, I had Ladytron's "Destroy everything you touch" stuck in my head for several days. It did feel like particularly destructive work!

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  6. I get earworms an awful lot, and it can become quite irritating. This is mostly because it tends not to be whole pieces of music but fragments repeated. Mahler gives me more earworms than any other composer, and Wagner's pretty bad too - individual leitmotivs get stuck on repeat in my head.

    One effect that I don't think has been mentioned here (but I think is quite common) is for two or more music fragments to be stuck together, e.g. a line or two of one song then merging seamlessly into a different song.

    Also, does anyone else sometimes get two earworms running concurrently? Last weekend, for example, I had I've Got A Lovely Bunch Of Coconuts (why???) superimposed perfectly over the Colonel Bogey march.

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  7. The Britney/Janacek combo was pretty bad too.

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  8. As a singer I get particularly annoyed with earworms of songs where I can't quite remember all the lyrics so it's like a stuck record going round and round to the same bit. I also go annually to a folk festival and after a whole day and night of singing I go to bed with a waterfall of songs in my head which can keep me awake for hours. Not sure whether that is pleasure or pain!

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  9. For me at least, earworms also come from language and environmental sounds. I repeatedly found myself thinking/singing Soundgarden's Black Hole Sun while gardening in my Tucson AZ yard. I finally realized that the Eurasian Collared-Doves coo their monotonous "song" with the same basic cadence as the refrain of that song! I also get names or phrases stuck in my head, just like a musical earworm, but without the music.

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  10. I spent several decades playing music Far Too Loudly through my headphones, so I've got a lot imprinted into me.

    Happily, many of my earworms are better than the originals! For instance, the version of Simon and Garfunkle's Sounds of Silence that sometimes flows has only bass, voice and drums.

    And I convert things to other styles and tempos.

    The old blues song Dyin Crapshooter Blues? Recently, I had it in 3/4 time. ("Now don't y'all stand around," old Jesse cried. / He wanted everyone to WALTZ (two, three) whilst he died!) I was humming that and giggling all day at work.

    My buddy Norel Pref took similar comments of mine about Darth Vader's theme music and came up with something called "Yakety Syth," which can be found online.

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  11. (That should have been "Yakety Sith.")

    @silverfin: As a kid, we sang the Col. Bogie to the lyrics, "Comet, it makes your teeth turn green ..."

    But any coconut that does that doesn't sound lovely at all.

    And y'know what goes with almost anything? Nevin's Narcissus

    Finally (I hope,) one pair of songs I love to combine mentally is My Favorite Things with 21st Century Schizoid Man.

    At paranoia's poison door
    These are a few of my favorite things.

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  12. Larsen E. WhipsnadeNov 10, 2011 01:26 PM

    The earworms involving Billy Joel and/or The Eagles are the worst. All it takes is a snippet of some dreck like "Uptown Girl" in the supermarket and it's mentally replaying for days.

    Most of the time, though, these are great. I love being able to call up music any time I want. I always think of The Kinks' "Stormy Sky" when it rains.

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  13. MAKE IT STOP
    "Pumped Up Kicks" by Foster the People
    Been going for a week now with no signs of leaving my head...

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  14. I often get earworms when my neighbor starts singing this song that I really hate and it just keeps on playing inside my head over and over for the whole day. It sucks because this neighbor or mine sings it everyday since 2 weeks ago!

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  15. 'Earworms' are almost a daily phenomenon for me. But what sets mine apart is that it will be jus be a specific line from a song that will run in my head so of course i will one line sing aloud everyday. suffice it to say,it drives my friends crazy.they have come to accept it as one of my quirks.

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  16. so they call i earworm?i though they call it the LSS, the last song syndrome?

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  17. Come on, people. Why fight it? If it's an earworm, it's because it's irresistible for some reason. It could be Abba, or Strauss (personal fave earworm when walking in the street), Cliff Richard or U2. The earworm spans genres and is most likely a combination of unforgettable melody + mood detached from the snob reaction of "Me, whistle Abba? Never on your life!". Your subconscious knows better apparently. Listen to your inner ear and you'll enjoy music at a simpler plane.

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  18. Jacques FrescoNov 15, 2011 04:21 AM

    Earlier this year I spent a few months travelling in India, and very early on my ipod broke, so I spent about 3 months not being able to choose the music I heard. I thought it'd be an interesting experience.

    One nice outcome was that songs I'd liked as a teenager kept popping into my head (I don't know what might have triggered them), but there was a dark side...

    For about a week, whenever I was walking at a steady pace (and even when sitting standing still) the Honky Tonk from David Lynch's Blue Velvet would start up, and it drove me nuts!

    Later on a sleepless overnight bus journey I spent about 6 or 7 miserable hours being bombarded by parts of Van Morrison's 'Brown Eyed Girl' Just thinking about it now makes me cringe.

    I agree with Silverfin about fragments being much more irritating. One that has kept returning for the last 2 or 3 years is:
    'I'm not the kinda girl
    I'm not the kinda girl
    I'm not the kinda girl
    who'd give up just like that
    like that
    like that
    like that, oh
    I'm not the kinda girl...'

    ad nauseam

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  19. Larsen E. WhipsnadeNov 15, 2011 11:31 PM

    That's "The Tide is High"!! The original's by The Paragons but Blondie's version was a HUGE hit.

    Classic earworm material.

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  20. The only time earworms both me is when I am reading in bed. Sometimes I find I can't concentrate on the book. And I feel it's almost a stress response as if reading is too exciting and pleasurable.

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  21. I get earworms when trying to learn new tunes for the concertina or pipes. My current one is the catchy march 'Horsburgh Castle' by Ian Hardie. The earworms fade when the tune is thoroughly learned.

    Helen

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  22. I always wake up with a different song in my head, like a screensaver I revert to it when there's nothing to do. I blamed my clock-radio for many months until I switched it to a beep setting and it still happened.

    The most common is S club 7, don't stop moving! For some reason! The best is when I don't know the words but my brain just plays what I heard. Likethis morning, it's Star Girl by McFly:
    "Hey, looking out for a star girl, I'm fflanna blaaah to the caaaar girl..."

    The best way is to sing a non-sticky song, like Karma Chameleon or Hey Jude. It's there for a bit to drown the other song out, but then fades away,

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  23. 'Crush On You' by the Jets has been stuck in my head for days on end. As I don't know all the lyrics, it's just a couple of lines from the chorus going round, and round, and round, and round.

    "How did you know? 'Cause I never told. You found out: I've got a crush on you!"

    But I don't really mind it, because I like the song. I just sing it out loud and for some strange reason, I enjoy it more.

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  24. I guess this makes me really weird, but for as long as I can remember, I have ALWAYS had a song stuck in my head.

    Every waking moment of every day, there is a song playing in my head. The song can change every couple of minutes, stick for hours, or keep switching out with others. At times, I even have several combined in my head like an awesome mashup.

    I can choose what song I want to hear and play it in my head, thoroughly, as if I'm listening to it.

    Even in my sleep, I often note while dreaming the songs in my head.

    I'm often singing along or tapping to the song.

    It's not annoying, just awesome. For a long time, I thought the same was true for everyone, but recently I've found it's not. I can't imagine not hearing a song in the back of your mind, constantly playing. How does that even happen?

    And yeah, sometimes random things can trigger songs--even things people say. Hell, sometimes someone says a phrase and I'll instantly begin to sing the lyrics to a song with that phrase. It happens all the time because I know so many.

    Is there ANYONE else like this?

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  25. At least we now have a word for it! Recently it's been Lady Gaga whose compositions have a frequency and contruction almost designed for permanent implanting in your "inner ear". Is it any music, or only certain sequences of words/music/chords/frequencies? Is it related to some historic or present emotional disturbance of the listener or do certain pieces of music contain a "hook" which latches onto the listener's emotions at the time .Does this happen in cultures not exposed to the 24/7 intrusion of piped music such as tribal Africa et al? This certainly requires more investigation!

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  26. Great survey!

    I wake up in the morning and still hear the song that was in my dream, but I do not know this song. Does this mean that I ever heard it before? or this song composed by my brain

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