- Joined
- Feb 2, 2022
Mine is the sound of a French man aggressively shouting "hon hon hon" during a womens butt bump pool competition.
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Is your pfp Tomie? If so I don't know if you can be trusted.Autism and farts.
I have never experienced ASMR. The closest I can think of is I had a weird, pleasant feeling when hearing a high quality sound of a cat purring loudly.
Try listening to songs that you like. That is the only thing that has worked consistently for me. Maybe because music targets more or different parts of the brain, or because you memorize the song, anticipate the parts you like, and then it delivers.Idk if ASMR works for me. When I hear women whispering into microphones it just makes me want to break things.
Music is able to create an intensely pleasurable experience that can be described as "chills". Blood and Zatorre (2001) used PET to measure changes in cerebral blood flow while participants listened to music that they knew to give them the "chills" or any sort of intensely pleasant emotional response. They found that as these chills increase, many changes in cerebral blood flow are seen in brain regions such as the amygdala, orbitofrontal cortex, ventral striatum, midbrain, and the ventral medial prefrontal cortex. Many of these areas appear to be linked to reward, motivation, emotion, and arousal, and are also activated in other pleasurable situations. The resulting pleasure responses enable the release dopamine, serotonin, and oxytocin. Nucleus accumbens (a part of striatum) is involved in both music related emotions, as well as rhythmic timing.