New York: Scientists now have a better understanding of why teens, girls in particular, become so passionate about some musicians.
The symptoms of ‘Bieber Fever’ include uncontrollable screaming, swooning and spending hours on Twitter and Facebook.
It primarily affects preteen and teen girls, yet it is highly contagious and can infect mothers, too. In severe cases, sufferers camp out on sidewalks for days.
By disease standards, ‘Bieber Fever’ is approaching a global pandemic with the release of the 18-year-old pop star’s latest album ‘Believe’ last week.
According to experts, parents of star-struck ‘Bieliebers’, as his fans are sometimes known, that what looks like mass hysteria is a harmless stage in adolescent development.
Long before the Beatles, Elvis and Frank Sinatra, frenzied female fans threw their clothing at 19th century pianist and composer Franz Liszt and fought over locks of his hair, say music historians.
Hearing familiar, favourite music stimulates the release of dopamine, the neurotransmitter involved in pleasure and addiction, providing the same rush as eating chocolate or that winning does for a compulsive gambler, says neuroscientist Dr. Daniel Levitin, who was able to observe the process using fMRI scans in his lab at McGill University in Montreal.
Levitin’s research also showed that musical tastes formed in the teen years become part of the brain’s internal wiring, as that is the time when some neural pathways are solidifying and others are being pruned away.
That’s why the music adults tend to be nostalgic for is the music from their teenage years.
Boys also develop musical tastes in this phase of life, but adolescent girls are far more likely to become infatuated with pop stars, experts say, because they are awakening to romantic and sexual feelings that are both intoxicating and scary.
Having a crush on a celebrity they are unlikely to meet is a way to try out such feelings at a safe distance.
“A lot of girls I know practiced their first kiss on a poster. I don’t think that’s changed at all,” the new York Post quoted Mark Rubinfeld, professor and chair of sociology at Westminster College in Salt Lake City, as saying.
Boys are more likely to follow athletes intensely, partly out of a desire to emulate them and partly because rooting for a team conveys a sense of identity, psychologists said.
ANI
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