Scientific backing to would-be seducers who instinctively know they have to swap rap or heavy metal for Marvin Gaye to improve the odds for love, has been provided by French researchers.
Scientific backing to would-be seducers who instinctively know they have to swap rap or heavy metal for Marvin Gaye to improve the odds for love, has been provided by French researchers. In an unusual piece of research, investigators from the universities of Southern Brittany and Southern Paris recruited 87 single women aged 18 to 20.
The volunteers each spent five minutes in a waiting room where one of two carefully-selected tunes played in the background.
Lurking in another room was a young man, who had also been carefully selected, by another panel of women, to be "average" in looks.
After exposure to the background music, the woman was instructed to discuss the difference between two food products -- an organic cookie and a non-organic cookie -- with the young man.
At the end of their conversation, the young male used a standard chat-up line, asking the girl for her phone number and saying he wanted to ask her out for a drink.
What swayed his chances of success was the music that had been played in the waiting room, the researchers found.
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But when the romantic ballad "Je l'aime a mourir" ("I love her to death") by Francis Cabrel was played, his success rate nearly doubled, to 52 percent.
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"The results are interesting for scientists who work on the effect of background music on individuals' behaviour."
The research appears in a peer-reviewed journal, Psychology of Music.
Source-AFP