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  • This... requires your full attention. And if you have headphones or earbuds, use them!

  • Theyll make the experience better. Okay, here we go.

  • All of these clips, or at least the audio from them, have been used in scientific studies

  • where researchers have tried to make people’s hair stand on end; and cause what we commonly

  • know as goose bumps, goose flesh, chilly bumps, or goose pimples.

  • The scientific term for this is the pilomotor reflex orpiloerection”… I probably

  • won’t use that word again.

  • Really, all sorts of things can give you goosebumps. And I want you to think of the last time you

  • remember experiencing them. Was it at the beginning of this video? And if not, was it

  • from cold? Or music? A movie? Were you just having an intense emotional response to something?

  • The most obvious time we experience goosebumps is when were cold. In this case, your hair

  • standing on end creates a buffer between your skin and the cold air, helping you thermoregulate.

  • This makes sense, but why do we also get goosebumps from listening to music or watching a movie?

  • Let’s take a closer look.

  • There’s a tiny muscle at the base of every individual hair on your body, the arrector

  • pili. When these muscles contract, they pull on your hairs, making them stand upright.

  • And when they relax, the hair lies flat again.

  • These are involuntary muscles and theyre part of our sympathetic nervous system, which

  • is responsible for most fight or flight responses. The reaction is closely tied to our emotional

  • state.

  • And apart from being cold, this is why movies may be the best trigger for goosebumps. Movies

  • tend to simulate social interactions, and the combination of both audio and visual stimuli

  • can trigger intense flight or fight responses, resulting in adrenaline release, and that

  • tiny arrector pili muscle contraction.

  • But listening to music also causes goosebumps in a vast majority of adultsthough the

  • reasons are a little more nuanced.

  • One theory suggests that just the structure and nature of music itself are sufficient

  • to cause goosebumps, because it creates anticipation in the brain. Often, our minds automatically

  • try to predict what fits next within a song, and the internal stakes build while we listen.

  • If our predictions are correct, we receive a dopamine release and eventually this can

  • be enough to cause a chilling sensation.

  • One study found that Samuel Barber’s Adagio for Strings, what’s what’s playing in

  • the background right now, was extremely effective in causing goosebumps in a majority of people.

  • Another theory suggests that sad songs are more likely to cause chills than happy songs,

  • and depending on who you ask, this could be because sad or nostalgic music recreates the

  • chilling feeling of social loss. Feeling separate from your family or social group is known

  • to give rise to goosebumps, but the reason why isn’t well understood.

  • We do know that getting shivers down the spine from music activates the same brain structures

  • as other things that make us feel euphoriclike food and some drugs.

  • Brain imaging studies have found that goosebumps activates structures like the amygdala and

  • parts of the prefrontal cortex, and theyre commonly involved in pleasure and reward.

  • Getting the chills can make us feel good, but when you think about it, if we didn’t

  • get them, lots of other things would make us feel good too. Like our friends, or cake.

  • Goosebumpsare pretty useless.

  • But chills are more useful to cats, dogs and many other animalstheir hair stands on

  • end when theyre especially worked up or afraid. The same pilomotor reflex that we

  • get makes them look bigger, scarier and may deter predators.

  • Imagine youre an echidna. Similar bundles of muscles at the base of their quills allows

  • them to move their quills independently, for protection.

  • And for us, goosebumps are a remnant of evolution. Our hair standing on end kept us warm before

  • clothing and it may have deterred predators as well. These chills are a weird and wonderful

  • quirk of our biology that you can, quite literally, see on the skin of a goose.

  • Goosebumps have many different names in different countriesGoose skin, skin of the hen,

  • chicken skin, duck skin and bird skin. Let me know what you call it, and if there’s

  • any movies or songs that specifically cause it, down in the comments.

This... requires your full attention. And if you have headphones or earbuds, use them!

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B2 中上級

このビデオは、あなたに鳥肌を与えるかもしれません (This Video May Give You Goose Bumps)

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    簡宇謙 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
動画の中の単語