05/08/2026
I definitely have “frisson!” Do you?
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Not everyone experiences music the same way. For roughly half the population, a powerful chord, a vocal break, or a sudden key change can trigger something physical — goosebumps, shivers, a wave of sensation across the skin. This phenomenon has a name: frisson.
Research from the University of Southern California found that people who experience frisson have measurably different brain structures from those who do not. Specifically, they show greater connectivity between the auditory cortex and the areas responsible for emotional processing — meaning music and emotion are more deeply linked in their brains. When a piece of music hits an unexpected emotional peak, the brain releases dopamine through both the anticipation and the arrival of that moment — producing not just a felt emotion but a full physiological response.
Studies also show that people who regularly experience frisson tend to score higher on the personality trait of openness to experience — a trait associated with curiosity, creativity, and emotional depth. Musical training further increases sensitivity, as trained listeners are more attuned to the structural cues — crescendos, harmonic tension, vocal dynamics — that most reliably trigger the response.
The experience itself involves the autonomic nervous system — the same system behind the fight-or-flight response. A sudden emotional resolution in music can register like a mild version of a surprising or deeply meaningful event, and the body responds before the conscious mind has fully caught up.
If music regularly moves you physically, that is not just preference. It is neuroscience.
Images are generated by AI and for demonstration purposes only.
Source: Wassiliwizky, E., et al. (2017). The emotional power of poetry: Neural circuitry, psychophysiology and compositional principles. Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience, 12(8), 1229–1240. / Salimpoor, V. N., et al. (2011). Anatomically distinct dopamine release during anticipation and experience of peak emotion to music. Nature Neuroscience, 14(2), 257–262.