Haas / Brandes Music that works
1. Auflage 2010
ISBN: 978-3-211-75121-3
Verlag: Springer Wien
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: 1 - PDF Watermark
Contributions of biology, neurophysiology, psychology, sociology, medicine and musicology
E-Book, Englisch, 342 Seiten, eBook
ISBN: 978-3-211-75121-3
Verlag: Springer Wien
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: 1 - PDF Watermark
Zielgruppe
Professional/practitioner
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
Introduction: Music that works.- Sonification: listen to brain activity.- Chronobiology — as a foundation for and an approach to a new understanding of the influence of music.- Music as medicine: incorporating scalable music-based interventions into standard medical practice.- A perspective on evidence-based practice.- The audio-vocal system in song and speech development.- The significance of exposure to music for the formation and stabilisation of complex neuronal relationship matrices in the human brain: implications for the salutogenetic effects of intervention by means of music therapy.- Music and the self.- Neural substrates of processing syntax and semantics in music.- A City Upon a Hill: making scientific progress in brain-based music research in typical development, autism and other disorders.- The rhythm of the heart — the tempus of music — Mozart, Ligeti and the Rat.- Music and child neurology: a developmental perspective.- Prenatal “experience” and the phylogenesis and ontogenesis of music.- Music and the evolution of human brain function.- Clinical applications of music therapy in neurologic rehabilitation.- Human biochronology: on the source and functions of ‘musicality’.- A study of synchronisation behaviour in a group of test persons during Baksy and Dhikr exercises via psycho-physiological monitoring.- Resonance and silence — the significance in medicine.- Emotion modulation by means of music and coping behaviour.- Identifying the effectiveness of a music-based auditory stimulation method, on children with sensory integration and auditory processing concerns: a pilot study.- Music as a medicine: incorporating music into standard hospital care.