Friday, November 18, 2011

Tortoises: Singing, and listening to music, have beneficial, neurophysiological effects, Omega 3 fatty acids, TALK THERAPY to omega 3 neurophysiology?

In my experience, both singing, and listening to music,

have beneficial, neurophysiological effects,

with some parallels with omega 3 fatty acid effects,

as well as MDMA effects.


Where are the clinical papers that might prove/show this,

and that might also engage what I'd like to call questions specifically about 'neurophysiology' -

that brain-bodymind experience that occurs with flax seed oil (for me),

or with entheogens, for example.


See 'Omega fatty acids,'



'Music,'




the 'World University Music School' here -




or 'Entheogens,'



or the upcoming Neurophysiology wiki Subjects).


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I'm curious whether there's clinical, psychiatric research -

rigorous, scientific, explicit & specific -

on moving, via TALK THERAPY,

to omega 3 neurophysiology in the brain,

as if eating flax seed, or fish, oil.


Clinical papers?

(See 'Omega fatty acids,' 'Psychiatry' or the 'World Univ. Medical School' here - http://worlduniversity.wikia.com/wiki/Subjects, or the upcoming Neurophysiology wiki Subject).

NYT's artiicle?

Clinical research? ...


with an invitation to add ...



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... may start a Google Hangout for Singing Harmony - http://worlduniversity.wikia.com/wiki/Singing_Harmony - Google + has a video music button :) ... We may be able to turn on some voices, and turn off others, add or sing with this youtube video, that score, invite that music director or singer ... Just found a few online pianos for getting pitches and singing thirds, for ex. - http://www.bgfl.org/bgfl/custom/resources_ftp/client_ftp/ks2/music/piano/ - they're not Steinways yet, but a nice beginning ...















(http://scott-macleod.blogspot.com/2011/11/tortoises-singing-and-listening-to.html - November 18, 2011)


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