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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: study finds + music moves + music  Related to the article below (Last Update: 5/5/2008)


Dallas Morning News
PPT finds creativity in diversity
Dallas Morning News, TX - Apr 19, 2008
I got most into it with headphones, but I had to stop because I kept wanting to break out with dance moves at work. Tahiti: Music always sounds better at ...
Elliott Sharp: Concert in Dachau & Octal
All About Jazz, PA - May 3, 2008
Sharp moves, ever so gradually, from earthy blues-inflected drones into less traditional territory and back again. The whole concert is in, or centered on, ...
Music man: BGSU professor is a winner of Governor's Awards for the ...
Toledo Blade, OH - Apr 6, 2008
"It's a way of depositing their music," he says. "It's an untapped resource. It's almost sitting there and waiting for someone to study contemporary music ...
Hand claps and swinging legs
Western Front, WA - Apr 29, 2008
Tamburini first learned of capoeira as an undergraduate when he went to Brazil as part of a study abroad program. The Portuguese music capoeiristas perform ...
Emotional moves busted in "Planet B-Boy"
Denver Post, CO - Apr 11, 2008
(Elephant Eye Films ) A serendipitous bit of programming has two entertaining, insightful documentaries about music subcultures and gender opening in Denver ...
Posted By Salmon, Charles
Welland Tribune,  Canada - Apr 24, 2008
... in rituals, music and dance. Meanwhile, back in the ancestral homeland, life moves on. Thus, when the emigrant returns for a visit, he or she finds that ...
Prose Urgencies: Forrest Gander and a Faithful Existence
Bookslut, IL - Apr 7, 2008
Gander?s exploration of Chessnut?s music reveals the pop artist?s poetic gifts, and without extending the burden of critical evaluation, Gander identifies ...
Student says involvement leads to success
Idaho Press-Tribune, ID - Apr 6, 2008
Music is a big part of her life, and she hopes to study guitar when she moves on to high school next year. She plays Amateur Athletic Union basketball and ...
Television movies for the week of May 4
Pittsburgh Post Gazette, PA - May 3, 2008
12:05 PM (CC) ? Music and Lyrics '07. Hugh Grant. A washed-up '80s superstar must make beautiful music with a lyrically gifted plant caretaker when a pop ...
Around the schools
Scranton Times-Tribune,  USA - Apr 21, 2008
With a family in music, it?s no wonder that Brian Hollenbaugh has taken an interest in it as well. Brian?s father, John, is a keyboard player for the local ...
Source: Google News

Using background music to affect the behavior of supermarket shoppers -
RE Milliman - Journal of Marketing, 1982 - JSTOR
... Further, as a result of the find- ings of previously ... Results of the Study Pace of
In-Store Traffic ... consistently associated with the faster tempo music (MI mean ...

[BOOK] Feminine Endings: Music, Gender, and Sexuality
S McClary - 2002 - books.google.com
... the book indispensable when they study a wide ... we focus primarily on classical
music?find it increasingly ... premises and conventions of that music as universal. ...

[BOOK] The Meaning of Music: A Study in Psychological Aesthetics
CC Pratt - 1931 - McGraw-Hill Book Company, Inc.

Listening to Popular Music
D Riesman - American Quarterly, 1950 - JSTOR
... Herta Herzog, "Professor Quiz- A Gratification Study," Radio and ... Or, he may find
within the field of jazz ... Does popular music itself offer him enough variety to ...

[BOOK] The Rhythmic Structure of Music
G Cooper, LB Meyer - 1960 - books.google.com
... the development of a fruitful approach to the study of rhythm ... 2 The Rhythmic Structure
of Music Some of the ... bear with us, trusting that he will find that the ...

Systems of articulation, logics of change: Communities and scenes in popular music -
W Straw - Cultural Studies, 1991 - ingentaconnect.com
... There, one finds a preoccupation with finding pre-existent ... appropriate to the next
collective move in an ongoing transformation of rock-music culture and ...

[BOOK] Music in Everyday Life -
T DeNora - 2000 - books.google.com
... approach was its ability to unhook the study of art ... From this point on, a music that
had truth-value ... the sensuous life of the subject could find its fulfilment ...

[BOOK] The Anthropology of Music -
AP Merriam - 1964 - books.google.com
... the historian of musical instruments often finds prototypes of ... to all people interested
in music and to all interested in primitive culture, the study of this ...

[BOOK] Music Therapy: An Art Beyond Words -
L Bunt - 1994 - books.google.com
... J. Tillman, 'The Sequence of Musical Development: A Study of Children's ... that some
of the first fully trained music therapists began to find employment in ...

Music as a technology of the self -
T DeNora - Poetics, 1999 - Elsevier
... exhibited by the respon- dents in our study and their ... memory and moving on to con-
sider music as providing a ... or source in which respondents may 'find' or 'view ...

Source: Google Scholar

Music moves brain to pay attention, Stanford study finds

STANFORD, Calif. - Using brain images of people listening to short symphonies by an obscure 18th-century composer, a research team from the Stanford University School of Medicine has gained valuable insight into how the brain sorts out the chaotic world around it.

The research team showed that music engages the areas of the brain involved with paying attention, making predictions and updating the event in memory. Peak brain activity occurred during a short period of silence between musical movements - when seemingly nothing was happening.

Beyond understanding the process of listening to music, their work has far-reaching implications for how human brains sort out events in general. Their findings will be published in the Aug. 2 issue of Neuron.

The researchers caught glimpses of the brain in action using functional magnetic resonance imaging, or fMRI, which gives a dynamic image showing which parts of the brain are working during a given activity. The goal of the study was to look at how the brain sorts out events, but the research also revealed that musical techniques used by composers 200 years ago help the brain organize incoming information.

"In a concert setting, for example, different individuals listen to a piece of music with wandering attention, but at the transition point between movements, their attention is arrested," said the paper's senior author Vinod Menon, PhD, associate professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences and of neurosciences.

"I'm not sure if the baroque composers would have thought of it in this way, but certainly from a modern neuroscience perspective, our study shows that this is a moment when individual brains respond in a tightly synchronized manner," Menon said.

The team used music to help study the brain's attempt to make sense of the continual flow of information the real world generates, a process called event segmentation. The brain partitions information into meaningful chunks by extracting information about beginnings, endings and the boundaries between events.

"These transitions between musical movements offer an ideal setting to study the dynamically changing landscape of activity in the brain during this segmentation process," said Devarajan Sridharan, a neurosciences graduate student trained in Indian percussion and first author of the article.

No previous study, to the researchers' knowledge, has directly addressed the question of event segmentation in the act of hearing and, specifically, in music. To explore this area, the team chose pieces of music that contained several movements, which are self-contained sections that break a single work into segments. They chose eight symphonies by the English late-baroque period composer William Boyce (1711-79), because his music has a familiar style but is not widely recognized, and it contains several well-defined transitions between relatively short movements.

The study focused on movement transitions - when the music slows down, is punctuated by a brief silence and begins the next movement. These transitions span a few seconds and are obvious to even a non-musician - an aspect critical to their study, which was limited to participants with no formal music training.

The researchers attempted to mimic the everyday activity of listening to music, while their subjects were lying prone inside the large, noisy chamber of an MRI machine. Ten men and eight women entered the MRI scanner with noise-reducing headphones, with instructions to simply listen passively to the music.

In the analysis of the participants' brain scans, the researchers focused on a 10-second window before and after the transition between movements. They identified two distinct neural networks involved in processing the movement transition, located in two separate areas of the brain. They found what they called a "striking" difference between activity levels in the right and left sides of the brain during the entire transition, with the right side significantly more active.

In this foundational study, the researchers conclude that dynamic changes seen in the fMRI scans reflect the brain's evolving responses to different phases of a symphony. An event change - the movement transition signaled by the termination of one movement, a brief pause, followed by the initiation of a new movement - activates the first network, called the ventral fronto-temporal network. Then a second network, the dorsal fronto-parietal network, turns the spotlight of attention to the change and, upon the next event beginning, updates working memory.

"The study suggests one possible adaptive evolutionary purpose of music," said Jonathan Berger, PhD, professor of music and a musician who is another co-author of the study. Music engages the brain over a period of time, he said, and the process of listening to music could be a way that the brain sharpens its ability to anticipate events and sustain attention.

According to the researchers, their findings expand on previous functional brain imaging studies of anticipation, which is at the heart of the musical experience. Even non-musicians are actively engaged, at least subconsciously, in tracking the ongoing development of a musical piece, and forming predictions about what will come next. Typically in music, when something will come next is known, because of the music's underlying pulse or rhythm, but what will occur next is less known, they said.

Having a mismatch between what listeners expect to hear vs. what they actually hear - for example, if an unrelated chord follows an ongoing harmony - triggers similar ventral regions of the brain. Once activated, that region partitions the deviant chord as a different segment with distinct boundaries.

The results of the study "may put us closer to solving the cocktail party problem - how it is that we are able to follow one conversation in a crowded room of many conversations," said one of the co-authors, Daniel Levitin, PhD, associate professor of psychology and music from McGill University, who has written a popular book called This Is Your Brain on Music: The Science of a Human Obsession.

###

Chris Chafe, PhD, the Duca Family Professor of Music at Stanford, also contributed to this work. This research was supported by grants from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada, the National Science Foundation, the Ben and A. Jess Shenson Fund, the National Institutes of Health and a Stanford graduate fellowship. The fMRI analysis was performed at the Stanford Cognitive and Systems Neuroscience Laboratory.

Stanford University Medical Center integrates research, medical education and patient care at its three institutions - Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford Hospital & Clinics and Lucile Packard Children's Hospital at Stanford. For more information, please visit the Web site of the medical center's Office of Communication & Public Affairs at http://mednews.stanford.edu.

 
 
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