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Professor links mind and musical experience

April 20th 2008 00:54
Music mind Princeton University
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This is from: Princeton University : Neuroscience, the link is above and I have produced the article almost in its entirety for those who have an interest in such things and I thought it was particularly useful for those who love Rock and Roll and also the way preschoolers pick up language without being taught as I think there is too much emphasis on teaching things rather than allowing a child to learn of his own accord which seems to be overlooked almost entirely by so many.


But a child does need the right kind of environment in which to play, and learn, and without too much parental or other interference. I'd be very pleased to have the opinions of others about this, be they, so many of them, wrong.

So here is my extract from the article.

In a lecture titled “This is Your Brain on Music: The Cognitive Neuroscience of Musical Experience” yesterday afternoon in the James Stewart Theater at 185 Nassau, Levitin spoke to around 180 students and community members, addressing the connections between science and art, the development of musical experience and what music reveals about the brain.

“Music attempts to mimic the functions of the brain ... more so than speech. Music can represent the complexity of human emotion and its dynamic nature,” Levitin said.


He described humans as expert music listeners, referencing Noam Chomsky’s theory that because children learn to speak before being taught.

Levitin added that “by the age of 5, most children have internalized the rules about what chords progressions are legal or typical in their own culture’s music.”

Levitin then played music clips and asked the audience to identify the wrong note. The audience overwhelmingly found the change.

“All I did was move a note by a semi-tone, which is the smallest legal note,” Levitin said in response.

Levitin said that though finding wrong notes is easy, becoming an expert musician is much more difficult. He pointed to studies showing that expertise in most activities requires 10,000 hours of practice and countered the idea that there could be a single music gene.

Additionally, Levitin explored the neuroscience of music.

“Music involves every [brain] region that we’ve so far mapped,” he said.

Levitin’s own research has explored the relationship of expectation, such as thinking ahead as to what note will come next. Studies have found that the areas of the brain associated with movement activate when a person is listening to music even if he or she is sitting still, suggesting an evolutionary relationship between movement and music.

Levitin, a musician who left Stanford to play in a series of rock bands in the San Francisco Bay area, worked as a record producer for 415 Records, a small label, before founding moodlogic.com, the first internet music-recommendation company.

He then returned to Stanford to study cognitive psychology and is now a professor of psychology, behavioral neuroscience and music at McGill University.

“It was really interesting [to understand] how the brain responds [to music],” said Krystle Haliotis, a student from Westminster Choir College.

“One of the more interesting things he said was [about] the expectation [of sound] ... It’s one of those things that’s all over neurology,” Michael Fortner ’11 said.






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2 Comments. [ Add A Comment ]

Comment by tlcorbin

April 20th 2008 16:57
I subscribed to this theory before I knew it existed katyzzz, music that engages and inspires kids into action can usually be a good thing.

Raven

Comment by katyzzz

April 20th 2008 22:53
What amazes me is how natural it all is, without having to induce it. That has to be good.

because children learn to speak before being taught.

Levitin then played music clips and asked the audience to identify the wrong note. The audience overwhelmingly found the change.

“All I did was move a note by a semi-tone, which is the smallest legal note,” Levitin said in response.

Amazing stuff. Seems we all have it in us.

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