I have had American Pie stuck on replay since yesterday. But thanks to Zen I now feel a bad case of Julie Andrews coming on.
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I have had American Pie stuck on replay since yesterday. But thanks to Zen I now feel a bad case of Julie Andrews coming on.
I think an earworm and an auditory hallucination must be 2 different things. So, being a scientist I looked up your claim and found things like this abstract:
A case of idiopathic musical hallucination with increasing repertoire
M Satoh, M Kokubo, S Kuzuhara
"Musical hallucination is defined as a type of auditory hallucination characterised by the perception of music without an external source. Reports in the literature state that musical hallucinations are common in women, and are associated with ageing, deafness, brain diseases (epilepsy, tumour, stroke, meningitis and neurosyphilis), psychiatric diseases (schizophrenia and manic depression), toxic states (alcohol) and drugs (antidepressants, salicylate, quinine and aspirin). Some authors proposed that, when listening to music, the auditory input is processed by three stages, operating in a hierarchical fashion: perception of individual sounds, perception or imagery of pattern in segmented sound, and encoding or recognition of patterned segmented sound. It is supposed that musical hallucinations are caused by abnormal autonomous activity in the auditory brain systems responsible for normal musical imagery."
Still not convinced that it's the same thing, or is it :rolleyes:
TsPoet sez: I think an earworm and an auditory hallucination must be 2 different things. So, being a scientist I looked up your claim and found things like this abstract:
From personal experience, they are very different things.
The earworm is an annoying snatch of song (my most recent one was a snatch of a hymn I dislike) that just worms its way into my mental conversation with myself. I find myself humming it throughout the day and it drives me NUTS. The worst, of course, is that I never quite remember the whole thing, so I just have a sappy phrase to put up with. :mad:
The auditory hallucination is a whole different beast. I'm starting to occasionally "hear" someone say my name. No I'm quite alone. No, it's not frightening. It is a bit weird, but I don't mind a little bit of weirdness in my life. In fact, I prefer this to that %*##@^!! hymn. Considerably less annoying.
Title music from the super nerdy-cool british sitcom, the IT Crowd.
Brilliant.
I agree with Momonbike - I think an ear worm is not an hallucination. When a song is stuck in my head it can be distracting or annoying, but I never think I really hear it. I think you have think something is real for it to be an hallucination, even if the thought it's real is transient.
I've had smells that I think were hallucinations, though.
I have two dueling- "Start Wearing Purple" and "Strange OVertones". Both I know very little of so I jsut hear "Why don't you start wearing purple, wearing purple...." or the part of strange overtones where they talk about getting their mittens. :p
My latest earworm is driving me nuts, not because of the tune but because it's wrong.
Isn't it ironic, don't you think? It's so ironic, I really do think.
It's like rain on your wedding day. (That's NOT ironic, that's a bummer)
It's a free ride, when you've already paid. (Again, not ironic, just unfortunate)
It's the good advice, you just didn't take. (not ironic, just stupid)
...
This is driving me nuts! Please somebody, tell me there is some example of ironic in that song somewhere before I go insane.
Maybe this
as the plane crashed down, he thought "well isn't this nice". - maybe that's ironic??
I kissed a girl and I liked it : by Kate Perry.
I have had that stuck in my head for 2 weeks. Problem is, that is the only part of the song that I know.
I heard it on a comercial for something one day and can't get it out of my head. :eek: ;) :D