Wow This Explains Ittttt

Started by L0NZ., Today at 07:27:35 PM

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L0NZ.

Today at 07:27:35 PM Last Edit: Today at 07:30:04 PM by L0NZ.
Lately Ive been telling people how I don't hold onto new music anymore and find myself just listening to old shit Ive loved for decades. Someone can point me to an amazing artist, and I can enjoy the song once or twice, acknowledge the artist is talented, etc...... but I'll neverrrrrrr find myself just replaying it randomly because I feel like hearing it. Then I came across this. Wow.

QuoteYour brain peaked musically somewhere around age 16. Everything since then has been a dopamine echo.

Between the ages of 12 and 22, the mesolimbic dopamine pathway, the same circuit that processes cocaine and sex, fires at levels in response to sound that it will never reach again for the rest of your life. A 2011 McGill study used PET scans and fMRI simultaneously and found that music triggers dopamine release in the striatum at peak emotional arousal. The caudate nucleus lights up during anticipation of the good part. The nucleus accumbens lights up when it hits. Your brain is treating a guitar riff with the same reward architecture it uses for food-seeking and pair bonding.

During adolescence, that response is dramatically amplified. Pubertal hormones are flooding the system. The prefrontal cortex is still wiring itself. Memories formed during this window get encoded with a density of emotional tagging that nothing in your 30s or 40s can replicate. Researchers at the University of Leeds identified this as the "reminiscence bump": the period when your sense of self is forming, and the music playing during that formation becomes structurally integrated into your identity.

A 2025 longitudinal study from the University of Gothenburg analyzed 40,000 users' streaming data across 15 years. Younger listeners explored broadly across genres. Older listeners collapsed into increasingly narrow loops, almost entirely anchored to music from their teens and early twenties.

Your brain stopped losing interest in new music years ago. It's running a cost-benefit analysis. Familiar songs deliver guaranteed dopamine with zero processing cost. New songs require pattern recognition, expectation-building, and repeated exposure before the reward circuit kicks in. Past 25, most people stop paying that tax.

The one variable that predicts whether someone keeps exploring: the personality trait "openness to experience." Score high, you keep seeking. Score average, you default to the familiar forever.

The fix, if you want one: deliberate exposure. Three listens minimum before your auditory cortex builds enough predictive models to generate a reward response. One passive listen on a playlist will never get there. Your brain needs repetition to find the pattern, and it needs the pattern to release dopamine.


L0NZ.

I actually remember saying something like this to Rig I think yearsssss ago. About music and "formative" years, I just didn't know there was science behind it.


United Nations Barbie 🇺🇳

I know these bitches slow, I ain't know these bitches senile.



ATLien

Today at 07:58:11 PM #3 Last Edit: Today at 08:00:00 PM by ATLien
i kinda feel that way but then i dont cuz i def take on a lot of relatively new artists and end up listening somewhat faithfully as opposed to super casually

GODmani def made it to my "top listened songs" lists and dominated. Dopamine was one of the best albers i heard like ever.

then Latto (777), Doja Cat (Planet Her, and more recently "Jealous Type"..couldnt stop watching it)

but otherwise for the most part what u said rings true for me too. a lion's share of my listening def belongs to my old faithfuls.
 just not the part where i only listen 1 or 2 times and discard the gorls

ATLien

Today at 08:04:18 PM #4 Last Edit: Today at 08:05:54 PM by ATLien
but then again when i think of it even those gorls i mentioned have some type of tie to what i love from the past

GODmani reminds me of Toni dssdddssdsd

Latto is very Atlanta and I've been deep in love with the ATL since I first visited like almost 20 years ago

Doja Cat has the whole "cat" thing going on and ive always loved cats

fssfnsfnjnfsfjsjffjjsssjjsjns

so i guess one could argue that although i claim to be super open to newness.....the "newness" actually reflects a bit of the "oldness" and that could be what draws me to it.

 :guys:

could be a stretch but it def hit my mind.

Off The Wall.

Boy shut the fuck up. Crabby ass fag.

ATLien

Quote from: Off The Wall. on Today at 08:21:25 PMBoy shut the fuck up. Crabby ass fag.
dont be talking to my Lonzy like that :omgwatshappening:

but i do agree

Off The Wall.

Quote from: ATLien on Today at 08:30:17 PM
Quote from: Off The Wall. on Today at 08:21:25 PMBoy shut the fuck up. Crabby ass fag.
dont be talking to my Lonzy like that :omgwatshappening:

but i do agree
I'm talking about you raggedy ass faggot.

Ulysses

Quote from: Off The Wall. on Today at 11:13:47 PM
Quote from: ATLien on Today at 08:30:17 PM
Quote from: Off The Wall. on Today at 08:21:25 PMBoy shut the fuck up. Crabby ass fag.
dont be talking to my Lonzy like that :omgwatshappening:

but i do agree
I'm talking about you raggedy ass faggot.