Last updated on December 30, 2021 by Roger Kaufman
A cat likes music
What does she like better, the music or the movements?
The US composer David Teie writes music just for cats. According to a study, the sounds of harps and purring bass have a calming effect on animals. For People However, the cat works sound strange.
Source: WELT network reporter
Do animals like music?
Many pet owners leave their home radios all the time Time run to bring attentive pleasure to your dogs and domestic cats.
The channel selection is different. āWe have a very human tendency to project onto our animals and assume that they will certainly like what we like,ā said Charles Snowdon, an expert on pet music preferences.
āIndividuals think that if they like Mozart, their dog will certainly like Mozart. If they like rock and roll, they say their dog likes rock.ā
Contrary to popular belief that music is a uniquely human phenomenon, current and recurring studies show that animals actually share our ability to do so.
However, instead of looking for classical or rock, Snowdon, a pet psychologist at the College of Wisconsin-Madison, found that pets overall march to the beat of a different drum.
They enjoy what he calls āspecies-specific Songs" called: melodies that are specifically created using pitches, tones and tempos known to their respective species.
Without any pun intended, songs are all about scale: people like music that falls within our acoustic as well as vocal spectrum, uses sounds we understand, and progresses at a pace similar to our heartbeat.
A melody that is too expensive or reduced noises that are grating or intangible and songs that are too fast or sluggish are therefore indistinguishable.
For most animals, human ones fall Lieder into this incomprehensible, unrecognizable classification.
With vocal variations and heart rates extremely different from ours, they are simply not designed to appreciate songs tailored to our ears.
Most research studies find that pets typically respond to human music with complete disinterest, no matter how hard we try to make their legs tap.