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How Music Casts Its Spell on Us – The Marginalian



“Music,” the trailblazing composer Julia Perry wrote, “has a unifying effect on the peoples of the world, because they all understand and love it… And when they find themselves enjoying and loving the same music, they find themselves loving one another.” But there is something beyond humanistic ideology in this elemental truth — something woven into the very structure and sensorium of our bodies; as the great neurologist Oliver Sacks observed, “music can pierce the heart directly; it needs no mediation.”
Psychologist Dacher Keltner examines what that unmediated something is and how it pierces us in a portion of his altogether fascinating book Awe: The New Science of Everyday Wonder and How It Can Transform Your Life (public library) — a taxonomy of wonder derived from his study of twenty-six cultures around the world, across which music, above all other forms of beauty and spirituality, emerges as the most universal of our creaturely portals into transcendence.
Art by Kay Nielsen from East of the Sun and West of the Moon, 1914. (Available as a print and as stationery cards.)
After observing the virtuoso concert cellist Yumi Kendall respond bodily to the music she plays and cast an embodied enchantment upon those hearing it, Keltner writes:
When Yumi moves her bow across her cello’s strings, or when Beyoncé’s vocal cords vibrate as air moves through them, or when Gambian griot superstar Sona Jobarteh plucks the strings of her kora, those collisions move air particles, producing sound waves — vibrations — that move out into space. Those sound waves hit your eardrums, whose rhythmic vibrations move hairs on the cochlear membrane just on the other side of the eardrum, triggering neurochemical signals beginning in the auditory cortex on the side of your brain.
Sound waves are transformed into a pattern of neurochemical activation that moves from the auditory cortex to the anterior insular cortex, which directly influences and receives input from your heart, lungs, vagus nerve, sexual organs, and gut. It is in this moment of musical-meaning making in the brain that we do indeed listen to music with our bodies, and where musical feeling begins.
This neural representation of music, now synced up with essential rhythms of the body, moves through a region of the brain known as the hippocampus, which adds layers of memories to the ever-accreting meaning of the sounds. Music so readily transports us from the present to the past, or from what is actual to what is possible, spatiotemporal journeys that can be awe-inspiring.
And finally, this symphony of neurochemical signals makes its way to our prefrontal cortex, where, via language, we endow this web of sound with personal and cultural meaning. Music allows us to understand the great themes of social living, our identities, the fabric of our communities, and often how our worlds should change.
Composition 8 by Wassily Kandinsky, 1920s, inspired by the artist’s experience of listening to a symphony. (Available as a print.)
With an eye to a suite of studies examining the neurophysiology of awe through the lens of music — how different types of music affect our heart rate and hormones, how different people’s brains synchronize when listening to the same music — he adds:
When we listen to music that moves us, the dopaminergic circuitry of the brain is activated, which opens the mind to wonder and exploration. In this bodily state of musical awe, we often tear up and get the chills, those embodied signs of merging with others to face mysteries and the unknown… Music breaks down the boundaries between self and other and can unite us in feelings of awe… When we listen to music with others, the great rhythms of our bodies — heartbeat, breathing, hormonal fluctuations, sexual cycles, bodily motion — once separate, merge into a synchronized pattern. We sense that we are part of something larger, a community, a pattern of energy, an idea of the times — or what we might call the sacred.
Complement with the poetic physicist Alan Lightman on music and the universe, Nick Cave on music, feeling, and transcendence in the age of algorithms, and some thoughts on music and the price of what we cherish, then revisit the kindred science of “soft fascination” and how nature helps us think.



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What AI Body Scans Can (and Cannot) Tell You


We’re living through a full-fledged skinny epidemic. Even if seeing celebrities get thinner and thinner doesn’t mean anything to you, notice how marketing for various weight loss products is getting increasingly ubiquitous. When I look around, the onslaught doesn’t stop with all the ads for GLP-1s. What has really caught my eye recently is how I—a fitness writer who happens to be pretty thin—keep receiving targeted ads for different types of “AI body scans.” These services take a few different forms (which I dive into below), but what they all try to sell is the same idea: Apparently, I don’t know enough about my body. It turns out I need to know my body fat percentage, muscle mass, visceral fat, and of course, my “biological age.” Before I break down what exactly these AI body scans can (and cannot) tell you, know that this is not some takedown of AI tools being used by radiologists to spot cancer from a CT scan. What I’m focusing on here is all the false advertising for consumers like me, people naturally drawn to the shiniest tools to understand every little thing about their bodies. But before I build my health decisions around a number on a screen, I have to wonder about the gap between what these tools promise and what they actually deliver. What are AI body scans, exactly?Body composition scans are nothing new—it’s the AI angle that’s giving the market a fresh angle. The term “AI body scan” covers a range of technology, from clinical-grade DEXA machines used in research hospitals, to apps that claim to estimate your body fat from a selfie.
At the serious end sits the DEXA scan (Dual-Energy X-ray Absorptiometry). Originally developed to measure bone density, DEXA uses two low-dose X-ray beams to distinguish between bone, fat, and lean tissue with genuine precision. It can identify visceral fat (the dangerous kind that accumulates around organs), regional fat distribution, and bone density. A single session might cost between $40 and $300 out-of-pocket, depending on where you go and whether any insurance applies. A company like BodySpec, for instance, has built businesses around making DEXA more accessible, performing around a thousand scans a day and building what it describes as the “largest proprietary DEXA dataset” in the world. Below DEXA on the precision ladder sits “bioelectrical impedance analysis” (BIA). BIA is the technology powering most “smart scales,” gym body composition stations, and many of those consumer-level AI scanners that keep targeting me with ads. BIA works by passing a small electrical current through your body and measuring how it travels. Fat resists electrical current; lean tissue (mostly water) conducts it well. From this resistance, the device estimates body composition.Then, at the bottom of the technical hierarchy, sit the phone camera apps. Translating a 2D image into a body fat percentage or visceral fat estimate requires assumptions that are generous at best. These apps may be useful as very rough awareness tools, but so is a photograph.Another note on “AI” in this contextAgain, it’s worth being specific about what AI is actually doing in most of these products, because as always, the word can mean a lot of things. In the better DEXA-based services, AI is being used to process and contextualize large datasets, helping users understand their results in comparison to relevant populations, flagging trends over time, and personalizing recommendations. For instance, BodySpec describes using AI to give its scanning service a kind of institutional memory for each client, stitching together health history and personal context so that consultations feel personalized at scale. In consumer devices, “AI” most often means that an algorithm has been trained on a dataset to estimate body composition. But the AI is only as good as the underlying measurement, and those underlying measurements might not be accurate in the first place. What an AI body scan cannot tell youLet’s take a look at where the marketing diverges from the medicine, and where some skepticism is warranted. A body composition scan cannot tell you about your insulin sensitivity, inflammation, thyroid function, cortisol levels, or dozens of other physiological variables that determine your actual metabolic health. Two people can have identical DEXA results (same muscle mass, same body fat, same visceral fat reading), but one can have pre-diabetes while the other doesn’t. “I had two people with similar scan results, but very different metabolic health once labs were checked,” says Dr. Raymond Douglas, a board-certified oculoplastic surgeon and professor at Cedars-Sinai Hospital in Los Angeles. “And if you’re making lifestyle choices based on a scan number alone, you may be fixing the wrong problem.”What’s more, that sort of interpretation of scan results assume the reading was accurate in the first place, which isn’t always the case. “I have years of experience with seeing patients who have high muscle readings but are simply water-retained,” says Dr. Alexander Acosta. “If you have retained more water, say from a salty lunch or your period, the machine is likely to report a 5% increase in muscle mass.” This is especially relevant for those BIA products, like the smart scales you might see at the gym. Your hydration state—which fluctuates throughout the day, with exercise, with diet, with hormonal cycles—skews the result. Perhaps no feature of these AI scanners is more aggressively marketed than “biological age.” The marketing angle makes sense: What if you find out your body is actually half your age on paper? It’s no mystery how this number has a way of inspiring either relief or dread, and it often inspires purchases. Biological age is usually calculated by an algorithm that compares your information with population averages, and those averages are limited. “From my experience, the algorithms don’t take into account your genetic background and inherited metabolic rate. The computer may tell a 30-year-old they have a 50-year-old heart due to stress,”Acosta says. “I have actually seen these numbers change by five years after a bad night’s sleep.” A number that swings five years based on one night’s sleep isn’t a number worth obsessing over, if you ask me.

What do you think so far?

What body scans are actually good for One way to approach all this is to think of body scans as a tool to track trends over time, rather than expecting to have your world rocked from a single session. “Muscle trending up, visceral fat trending down—those are worth paying attention to,” Douglas says. “The mistake most people make is treating a single session like a full medical workup.”If you scan under consistent conditions every few months, you could glean a lot of useful information from the patterns that appear. Are you gaining lean mass while losing fat? Is your visceral fat creeping up despite stable weight? These are questions a body composition scan, done repeatedly, can help answer in ways a bathroom scale cannot.”A DEXA scan provides a much clearer picture of what is actually happening in your body by measuring body fat percentage by area, lean mass, bone density, and visceral fat,” says Elaine Shi, CEO and co-founder of BodySpec. “It moves us away from guessing based on proxies like BMI—which is outdated and doesn’t represent diverse populations—and allows us to make decisions based on clinical-grade insights.” For example, Shi says people taking GLP-1 medications for weight loss can lose a significant proportion of their reduction in lean muscle mass rather than fat, which could point to a metabolic problem that would be invisible on a regular scale.If you’re going to use DEXA, use it over the course of several months. Numerous scans taken under consistent conditions (same time of day, same hydration status, same proximity to exercise) could show patterns worth paying attention to. If you’re going to use BIA devices, understand that the readings are noisy. Don’t scan after a salty meal, after intense exercise, or during a phase of hormonal flux and expect accuracy. If you’re interested in inflammatory markers, fasting glucose, insulin, lipid panels, thyroid function, a body composition score is no substitute for bloodwork. “Treat the scan as an awareness tool, then combine it with blood tests, blood markers of inflammation, and lifestyle habits to draw conclusions,” says Douglas. You should also be especially skeptical of biological age scores. A single number generated by comparing your data to population averages on a given day is not a substantial medical insight. And when you see an ad for a phone camera app that claims to measure your visceral fat with AI, ask what the underlying measurement is. If there is no good answer (which there won’t be from a 2D image), the so-called AI has nothing real to work with.The bottom lineThe move away from BMI and toward actual body composition measurement is promising for a lot of people. If your doctor sends you to a DEXA scan to assess your bone density and you’re interested in other insights about your body composition along the way, consider your scan results as part of a bigger trend over time. Your body composition score may be a great starting point, but you still want a human healthcare professional to make sense of the results.At the end of the day, snake oil will always thrive in the wellness industry. These days, every snake oil salesman under the sun knows to slap on the term “AI-powered” to add authoritative language to imperfect products. Before you spend hundreds of dollars on a body scan (or waste your time and energy with a phone app), consider the limitations of these readings—and be honest about what exactly you’re trying to discover here. A scan that cannot distinguish between muscle and retained water, whose biological age score shifts five years with poor sleep, and whose readings vary with what you ate for lunch might not be giving you the answers about your body that you crave.



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ChatGPT Can Now Reach Out to a ‘Trusted Contact’ After Conversations Concerning Self-Harm


Despite expert advice against relying on chatbots for mental health questions and concerns, people are turning to AI programs like ChatGPT for help. The company has faced criticism for how its products have handled certain mental health issues—including episodes where users died by suicide following conversations with ChatGPT. As part of a campaign to address these problems, OpenAI is now rolling out a voluntary safety check system for users who might be concerned about their thoughts.As reported by Mashable, OpenAI just launched “Trusted Contact,” a new feature that lets you choose a trusted person in your life to connect to your ChatGPT account. The idea isn’t to share your conversations or collaborate on projects within ChatGPT; rather, if the chatbot thinks your personal chats are veering in a concerning direction with regards to self-harm, ChatGPT will reach out to your Trusted Contact, letting them know to check in on you.

Credit: OpenAI

To set up the feature, choose someone in your life who is 18 years old or older. (The contact must be 19 or older in South Korea.) ChatGPT will send that person an invitation to become your Trusted Contact: They have one week to respond before the invite expires. Of course, they can also decline the invitation if they don’t want to participate.
If the contact agrees, the feature kicks in. In the future, if OpenAI’s automated system thinks you’re discussing harming yourself “in a way that indicates a serious safety concern,” ChatGPT will let you know that it may reach out to the Trusted Contact, but also encourages you to reach out that contact yourself, with “conversation starters” to break the ice.While that’s happening, OpenAI has a team of “specially trained people” to analyze the situation. (It’s not all automated, it seems.) If this team concludes that the situation is serious, ChatGPT will then alert your Trusted Contact via email, text, or through an in-app notification in ChatGPT if they have an account. OpenAI says the notification itself is quite limited, and only shares general information about the self-harm concern, and advises the contact to reach out to you. It won’t send any chat transcripts or summaries either, so your general privacy should be preserved, all things considered.

What do you think so far?

OpenAI says that it’s working to review safety notifications in under one hour, and that it developed the feature with guidance from clinicians, researchers, and mental health and suicide prevention organizations. The feature is, of course, entirely voluntary, so the user will need to enroll themselves (and a contact) in if they feel it would help them. As long as they do, however, this could be a helpful way for friends and family to check in on people when they’re struggling—assuming they’re sharing those thoughts with ChatGPT. Disclosure: Ziff Davis, Lifehacker’s parent company, in April 2025 filed a lawsuit against OpenAI, alleging it infringed Ziff Davis copyrights in training and operating its AI systems.



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