
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Why do some songs get stuck in our heads? In this episode, our presenter Ginny Smith explores the psychology of earworms. Ginny hears about the possible evolutionary reasons for why we experience the phenomenon, learns what earworms can teach us about memory — and finds out how to get rid of them.
Our guests, in order of appearance, are Kelly Jakubowski, assistant professor of music psychology at Durham University; Petr Janata, professor of psychology at the University of California, Davis; and Michael K. Scullin, associate professor of psychology and neuroscience at Baylor University.
Episode credits: Presented and produced by Ginny Smith. Mixing and editing by Jeff Knowler. PsychCrunch theme music by Catherine Loveday and Jeff Knowler. Art work by Tim Grimshaw.
Research from our guests includes:
Dissecting an Earworm: Melodic Features and Song Popularity Predict Involuntary Musical Imagery
Spontaneous mental replay of music improves memory for incidentally associated event knowledge.
Bedtime Music, Involuntary Musical Imagery, and Sleep
By The British Psychological Society Research Digest4.9
1111 ratings
Why do some songs get stuck in our heads? In this episode, our presenter Ginny Smith explores the psychology of earworms. Ginny hears about the possible evolutionary reasons for why we experience the phenomenon, learns what earworms can teach us about memory — and finds out how to get rid of them.
Our guests, in order of appearance, are Kelly Jakubowski, assistant professor of music psychology at Durham University; Petr Janata, professor of psychology at the University of California, Davis; and Michael K. Scullin, associate professor of psychology and neuroscience at Baylor University.
Episode credits: Presented and produced by Ginny Smith. Mixing and editing by Jeff Knowler. PsychCrunch theme music by Catherine Loveday and Jeff Knowler. Art work by Tim Grimshaw.
Research from our guests includes:
Dissecting an Earworm: Melodic Features and Song Popularity Predict Involuntary Musical Imagery
Spontaneous mental replay of music improves memory for incidentally associated event knowledge.
Bedtime Music, Involuntary Musical Imagery, and Sleep

402 Listeners

487 Listeners

2,057 Listeners

64 Listeners

220 Listeners

812 Listeners

1,154 Listeners

8 Listeners

89 Listeners

340 Listeners

221 Listeners

507 Listeners

590 Listeners

730 Listeners

109 Listeners