Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Ovi Once Kenobi's avatar

The study mentioned is flawed. Majorly.

Hence any "conclusions" will also reflect a very narrow and not representative group. That are already skewed ( biased) towards library environment. (University of Central Lancashire ) .

Just short (Ask a seasoned statistician for more)

And correlations are NOT causality

( Mathematically proved by Judea Pearl - Turing price recipient not the political and narrow ( Upsalla University) group of notorious biased ones .

a: The sample group is hilariously small = statistical "power" is close to nil. ( 30 persons)

b: Diversity of group is nil on many NOT considered criteria ( all from same place)

c: There's music with lyrics that can be in a different language, that are part of a musical soundscape, so you can't really pay attention to words

d: Listening to WIDE, no lyrics music ( jazz - at least 50 styles I have only for that ),ambient, orchestral, classic ( gregorian, baroque, inpresionist, etc)

-I ALWAYS am more "enthusiastic " in writing and am more relaxed if I listen to music

- It's obviously that multitasking ( listening to words ) is detrimental to each task - thats how brain works in most mammals ( dolphins can "sleep " half a brain - but that doesn't imply they're able to multitask efficiently)

- I listen all the time to the city soundscape willy- nilly ( downtown Montréal)

- I 'mask" that most of the time with high end nature field recording ( surrogate nature ambient- from thunderstorms to loons on a lake with frogs at night)

- I actively listen yo some form of jazz ( Bill Evans playlist on repeat is productive, in my context. I might listen to Berlin electronica for getting in a "rhythm ". Or african ethnographic from Cabo Verde in a portuguese dialect ( don't pay attention to words, the rhythmic melodies are uplifting).

- Trumpet baroque is calming for me when writing

Setting the mood ( music, candles, favourite shirt, or PJ's, preferred chair, couch, room , meadow, etc is valid for anything. That's a truism . Being it the favourite axe in case you're an executioner and get some drumrolls. ( Being lazy and not skilled, I would go with a guillotine. Minimize the error outcomes. Hopefully. And increased consistency.

That's a big group of people that published just for the sake of personal advancement in a flawed academic criteria based construct.

Search "impact factor controversy " . And what impact facture is.

Expand full comment
KiKi Walter's avatar

LOVED this post!!!! I ALWAYS would listen to music when I wrote -- much in the way that Quentin described in the quote you used. Now I find that I'm not doing it so much. Similar to Stephen King. I'm not sure why that is. Old age? Sobriety? When I give tips for writing memoirs, one of my big ones is listen to music to set your tone/inspire you. Funny that I have wained a bit on that myself, despite being such a music lover.

Expand full comment
9 more comments...

No posts