Bookmark Forex Music!
Listen to Classical music, while you Trade or Scalp
We have assembled this Classical music collection to help you during your Forex trades. It is measured to last for a trade
session . Either the European morning or the U.S. morning. Don't trade more than the music lasts. If you take your daily profit goal, shut down
your trade station and head over for the pleasures of life.
Classical music has been scientifically proven to encourage cognitive development.
Classical music is an aural and visual feast that promotes creativity, mental awareness, which
will help you in your Forex trading.
Forex traders bring to their trading, different experiences based on their profession. Each profession or experience provides
different strengths and weaknesses. Engineers who try to learn Forex trading often try to model the market and project the price
direction based on equations. Doctors try to diagnose the price action during their Forex trades. The Forex market is not a patient .
The traders that have been professional athletes, are disciplined and they have the ability to control their emotions. Ofcourse the emotions can
provide valuable advantage concerning the trade management but too much of emotion control might be less productive.
It is evident that Forex trading is a great challenge among all professions, leaving most people challenged as never before in mastering
profitable Forex trading.
If one profession would appear to provide important insight for Forex trading, it would be the
field of Music because there is harmony in Forex price movements flow and market rhythm .
Consider the everyday experience of driving your car and trying to find a radio station that you would like to listen to.
Selecting the scan button allows you to listen for a few moments to each station until the right tune comes along. The driver doesn't
need to know all of the songs being played in every station. The main goal is to hear the song, that is appealing. In the same way, the
Forex market is constantly streaming a variety of patterns. Each day there are many opportunities for many potential trades. By
entering in the market flow and rhythm, along with the price action, that is "playing" a tradable pattern will be
revealed.
This is a sequence, that like music provides an underlying theme to market moves. In all this period ,classical music will
help you remain focus in the market flaw and rhythm emotional steady.
Can Listening to Music Help Us Work Better?
There are many people who like to listen to music while they work and I am certainly one of them. I find it helps me focus more on the task at
hand. Of course I can imagine that there are people who listen to music because it helps them NOT to focus on their job.
Whilst there may be many reasons for wishing to listen to music in the workplace, can it really improve your productivity?
We know that music can alter your mood. Films have been using musical scores for years to create the right mood for a scene. At
times you hardly notice the music at all but you are very receptive to the mood being conveyed. So can we use music to put us in a "productive"
mood?
Research seems to support such a claim. For example, a trial where 75 out of 256 workers at a large retail company were issued
with personal stereos to wear at work for four weeks showed a 10% increase in productivity for the headphone wearers. Other similar research
conducted by researchers at the University of Illinois found a 6.3% increase when compared with the no music control group.
So if we accept that music does increase productivity, does it matter what types of music we listen to? Does all music have the
same effect or are certain types better in certain circumstances?
If your goal is to increase your concentration then music which has a constant, easy beat and light melodies are recommended.
These are said to be good for those trying to study as they help you pace your reading to aid focus and memorising. Baroque music is reported as
an excellent example, especially the works of Vivaldi, Bach and Handel.
Rock music can have a similar effect. According to a report in the journal Neuroscience of Behavior and Physiology, the Russian
Academy of Sciences discovered that a person's ability to recognize visual images, including letters and numbers, is faster when either rock or
classical music is playing in the background.
If you are aiming to be more productive through being more relaxed, then you may be interested to learn that research has shown
that music with an upbeat rhythm can reduce stress hormone levels by as much as 41%.
Some of the most publicised studies into whether listening to music increases productivity have centred on what has been termed
the "Mozart effect". The term got its name after a study showed that college students had performed better solving mathematical problems when
listening to classical music. The effect of listening to Mozart does not appear to be limited to humans either. Apparently cows will produce more
milk if Mozart is played.
What is the Mozart effect ?

Wikipedia says:
The Mozart effect can refer to:
* A set of research results that indicate that listening to Mozart's music may induce a
short-term improvement on the performance of certain kinds of mental tasks known as "spatial-temporal reasoning;"[1]
* Popularized versions of the theory, which suggest that "listening to Mozart makes you smarter," or that early childhood
exposure to classical music has a beneficial effect on mental development;
* A US trademark for a set of commercial recordings and related materials, which are claimed to harness the effect for a
variety of purposes. The trademark owner, Don Campbell, Inc.,[2] claims benefits far beyond improving spatio-temporal reasoning or raising
intelligence, defining the mark as "an inclusive term signifying the transformational powers of music in health, education, and
well-being."
The term was first coined by Alfred A. Tomatis who used Mozart's music as the listening stimulus in his work
attempting to cure a variety of disorders. The approach has been popularized in a book by Don Campbell, and is based on an experiment published
in Nature suggesting that listening to Mozart temporarily boosted scores on one portion of the IQ test.[3] As a result, the Governor of Georgia,
Zell Miller, proposed a budget to provide every child born in Georgia with a CD of classical music.
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