It can be assumed that listening to a certain type of music (e.g., Mozart) increases the coupling of specific brain areas and in that way facilitates the selection and “binding” together of pertinent aspects of sensory stimulus into a perceived whole. It can be further assumed that if such a pattern of activated brain areas coincides with the pattern needed for task completion, an increase in task performance could be the result. This hypothesis was also supported by a recent study by Jaušovec and Habe (2005). They showed that Mozart’s music had a beneficial influence on respondents’ performance of spatial rotation tasks, and a slightly negative influence on the performance of numerical tasks. On the physiological level a general effect of Mozart’s music on brain activity in the induced γ band was observed, accompanied by a more specific effect in the induced lower-2 α band which was only present while respondents solved the numerical tasks.