Classical radio makes for mellower worms

Humans are not the only species soothed by the strains of classical radio. We know this thanks to Abram Sparks, an eighth-grader and budding scientist who lives in Hazel Green, Alabama.

Sparks won a regional science fair in April with an experiment in which he subjected worms to different musical genres. One bucket of worms listened to a radio playing classical music, while the other listened to rap. As the Huntsville Times reports, the worms in the classical bucket exhibited all the characteristics of respondents to public radio’s Classical Core Values study: they were soothed and free of stress, evidently a worm’s natural state. (It’s harder to say whether they had achieved “clarity of mind.”)

This was not the case for the worms subjected to rap. Sparks told the paper that those worms were “going crazy and trying to get out of the bucket.”

Sparks deserves recognition for his already significant contributions to both musicology and helminthology. However, the Huntsville Times article leaves some questions unanswered. Such as: which radio station were the worms listening to? Was it Huntsville’s WLRH? Or were they actually listening to CDs, and the reporter misused the label of “radio”?

And which musicians? Was the rap Tupac, or A Tribe Called Quest? And was the classical Bach and Brahms, or Schnittke and Schoenberg? These are important distinctions. With any luck, Abram Sparks could secure federal funding to extend his research and further our understanding.

About Mike Janssen

Mike Janssen Served as Scanning The Dial's original co-authors from Mar, 2008 to Jan, 2010 and is a freelance writer, editor and media educator based in the suburbs of Washington, D.C. He has written extensively about radio, mostly for Current, the trade newspaper about public broadcasting, where his articles have appeared since 1999. He has also worked in public radio as a reporter at WFDD-FM in Winston-Salem, N.C., where he began his career in journalism and filed pieces for NPR. Mike's work in radio expanded to include outreach and advocacy in 2007, when he worked with the Future of Music Coalition to recruit applicants for noncommercial radio stations. He has since embarked on writing a series of articles about radio hopefuls for FMC's blog.

Mike also writes regularly for Retail Traffic magazine and teaches workshops about writing, podcasting and radio journalism. In his spare time he enjoys vegetarian food, the outdoors, reading, movies and traveling. You can learn more about Mike and find links to more of his writing and reporting at mikejanssen.net.

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