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DJ Who Started Her Career After 50 Turns Raves Into Longevity Science Research

DJ Tina Woods, founder of Longevity Rave, is leading a groundbreaking research program exploring how electronic music, collective movement, and human connection may influence healthy aging and long-term health

 

At 61, Woods embodies the longevity philosophy she promotes, combining scientific innovation with an active nightlife routine. The initiative merges club culture with biomedical science and proposes a bold idea: the dancefloor could function as a health intervention.

 

From Late-Blooming DJ to Longevity Innovation Leader

Tina Woods did not follow a traditional path into electronic music. She discovered her passion for DJing in her mid-fifties after decades working at the intersection of science, technology, and health policy.

She originally learned how to DJ while recovering from foot surgery and navigating menopause, using music as both motivation and therapy. What began as a personal experiment soon became a central part of her lifestyle and professional mission.

Today, in addition to performing as a DJ under the name Tina Technotic, Woods is the CEO of Collider Health and co-founder of Longevity Rave, a collective that brings together scientists, artists, and entrepreneurs to explore how positive human experiences impact biology.

For Woods, dancing is not just entertainment. It is part of her personal health protocol.

“I enjoy more all-night dance parties now than before surgery,” she said. “They bring me such joy and are a big part of my own personal longevity protocol.”

The project is built on a simple but ambitious question: if joy and social connection improve health, can those effects be measured biologically?

 

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The Dancefloor as a Living Laboratory

 

Woods as DJ Tina Technotic at House of KOKO in London. House of KOKO

Woods as DJ Tina Technotic at House of KOKO in London. House of KOKO

 

Founded in London in 2024, Longevity Rave events look like electronic music parties, but they are structured with controlled variables such as BPM, lighting, sound intensity, and group dynamics.

The new scientific initiative, called the JoyScore Experiment, aims to transform these experiences into measurable data. Researchers analyze biomarkers linked to stress, inflammation, and recovery, alongside neural signals and emotional responses from participants.

The long-term goal is to develop a metric capable of quantifying joy and human connection in a way similar to sleep scores or fitness tracking indicators.

 

The Science of Human Connection

The concept is rooted in exposome science, which examines how environmental and social factors influence aging beyond genetics alone. Research already shows that social isolation can increase mortality risk at levels comparable to smoking, while positive social experiences may improve health markers.

Within this framework, the JoyScore team is investigating whether collective experiences such as group dancing can act as biological regulators.

The study integrates wearable brain sensors, blood biomarkers, and behavioral data to explore how rhythm and social synchrony affect the nervous system.

 

Tina Woods (AKA Tina Technotic) with her co-DJ Yukari Takehisa

DJs Tina Woods (Tina Technotic) and Yukari Takehisat. Credit: House of KOKO

 

The JoyScore initiative is part of a broader scientific effort to understand how emotional and social experiences influence biological aging. Researchers involved in the project are exploring whether collective activities such as synchronized movement and music can affect stress regulation, immune function, and nervous system balance. By combining wearable neurotechnology, physiological biomarkers, and behavioral data, the initiative aims to evaluate whether engineered social experiences can produce measurable improvements in resilience and long-term health.

 

Inside the JoyScore Experiment

A pilot event in San Francisco compared a standard social gathering with a choreographed “science rave.” Participants followed strict preparation protocols and had blood, saliva, and brain activity monitored throughout the musical experience.

The techno playlists were designed with scientific precision, including controlled tempo shifts and intensity changes to evaluate physiological responses to music.

The data collected will contribute to the first version of the JoyScore, an experimental metric of collective joy.

 

Between Science and Club Culture

Experts note that measuring happiness remains complex and that biological correlations do not necessarily prove causation. However, there is strong scientific consensus that happier individuals tend to live longer and show better health outcomes.

Longevity Rave emerges at a time when the wellness industry is expanding beyond supplements and laboratory testing, increasingly recognizing social and emotional experiences as components of longevity.

For Woods, the motivation is also cultural. In an era shaped by technology and artificial intelligence, she sees the dancefloor as a tool to restore human connection.

“That feeling you get on the dance floor — the connection, the power of the music, the synchrony, the euphoria — those are very powerful things,” she said.

Her husband is also her main raving partner, reinforcing the role of shared experiences in her longevity philosophy.

The idea may sound futuristic, but it raises a provocative question. What if collective joy experiences are as important to health as diet or exercise?

If the research confirms the hypothesis, the future of longevity might include something the rave community has always believed: dancing together could be medicine.

 

To explore the science, methodology, and upcoming research behind the JoyScore Experiment, visit the official page at https://www.longevityrave.world/the-joyscore-experiment.

 

For more on Tina Woods, Longevity Rave, and the JoyScore Experiment, follow:

 

Tina Woods

https://www.instagram.com/tina.technotic/

 

Longevity Rave

https://www.instagram.com/longevity.rave/

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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