Listening to music increases productivity. Some music is super effective.

Music has a way of streaming through empty angles and filling the environments with substance. Music can help you relax, make you cry, and even make you feel alive. But can music make you more productive? Research on this matter shows that people [...]
Music has a way of streaming through empty angles and filling the environments with substance.
Music can help you relax, make you cry, and even make you feel alive.
But can music make you more productive?
Research on the matter shows that people who listen to music perform their duties more quickly and generally have better ideas.
However, experts have shown that depending on the type of music you hear, it can also have a different effect.
They have identified five factors that determine when music positively affects productivity and negatively:
1: Musical structure. The songs with the most complex musical structure, such as the “Muffin Man” of Frank Zappas, can be more distracting to listeners than the simplest-based songs, such as “Teaching on a Jet Plane” by John Denver.
2: Text. The text may distract you from focusing on the message in the song.
3: Listening habits. If a person is accustomed to listening to music while working, then it is usually best for him to listen to music.
4: The difficulty of duty. If a task you need to perform at work requires more thought and concentration, music can make the task more difficult.
5: Check out files... When music is imposed on someone, then it is usually more distracting than when a person chooses to listen to music himself.










