80% of people listening to music will cause physical reactions, such as goosebumps, but a small number of people will have intense physical reactions, and this reaction is a "skin orgasm." Psychologists point out that these people's reactions are manifested in tremors, sweating, and muscle excitement throughout the body.
They point to a study showing that 80% of people have physical reactions to music, including feeling spine-chilling, happy, sad and uncomfortable. Another study showed that about 24% of people are moved to tears by listening to music, 10% get chills, and 5% get goosebumps on their skin. Moreover, they also pointed out that a small number of people can have skin orgasms because they feel strongly about the artistic conception of music.
"The only phenomenon that accurately describes music-induced emotions"
Psychologists Sek Louie of Wesleyan University in Middletown, Connecticut, and her colleague Luke Harrison noted that cutaneous orgasm is "the only phenomenon that accurately describes music-induced emotions." Writing in the daily "Psychological Field": "The word implies that it is a happy feeling, which is paradoxical in its universality and variability. Its effect depends on the part of the body. Personal and environmentally induced emotions, and the maintenance of similar feelings, convert the biological and psychological components into a cutaneous orgasm." However, they point out that because of the sexual relevance of the term, So it is rarely used.
Harmonious music can cause "skin orgasm"
Classical music, such as piano music, is famous for its ability to cause the body to produce strong orgasms, but researchers He also pointed out that music from other genres can also cause cries of equal intensity.