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The Cognitive Neuroscience of Music
Edited by Isabelle Peretz and Robert J. Zatorre
466 pages
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12pp colour plates, numerous tables and figures
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240x168mm
978-0-19-852519-6
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Hardback
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10 July 2003
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This item is printed to order. Items which are printed to order are normally despatched and charged within 5-10 days.
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- Edited and written by the leading researchers in this field
- An important addition to OUP's acclaimed list in music psychology
Readership: Cognitive psychologists/Cognitive neuroscientists. Music psychologists. Advanced Undergraduate level upwards.
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Edited by Isabelle Peretz, Department of Psychology, University of Montreal,, and Robert J. Zatorre, Montreal Neurological Institute, McGill University, Montreal Click here to go to Robert Zatorre's websiteContributors: Sandra E. Trehub, Department of Psychology, University of Toronto, Canada Carolyn Drake, Experimental Psychology, University of Boulogne, France Jenny R. Saffran, Department of Psychology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA Ian Cross, Department of Music, University of
Cambridge, UK David Huron, School of Music, Ohio State University, USA Stephen McAdams, IRCAM-CNRS, Paris, France Daniel Matzkin, IRCAM-CNRS, Paris, France Carol L. Krumhansl, Department of Psychology, Cornell University, USA Petri Toiviainen, Department of Music, University of Jyvaskyla, Finland Barbara Tillmann, University Claude Bernard Lyon, Audition-CNRS, Lyon, France Jamshed Bharucha, Dartmouth College, USA Emmanuel Bigand, University of Bourgogne, LEAD-CNRS, France Mark Jude Tramo, Department of Neurology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA Catherine Liegeois-Chauvel, INSERM, Laboratory of Neurophysiology, France Timothy Griffiths, Department of
Neurology and Physiological Science, Newcastle University Medical School, UK John Brust, Department of Neurology, Harlem Hospital Center and Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York, USA Isabelle Peretz, Department of Psychology, University of Montreal Severine Samson, Department of Psychology, University Charles de Gaulle, France Andrea Halpern, Psychology Department, Bucknell University, Pennsylvania, USA Robert Zatorre, Montreal Neurological Institute, Canada Lawrence Parsons, Director, Cognitive Neuroscience Program, National Science Foundation, USA Mireille Besson, National Center for Scientific Research Language and Music Group, France Mari Tervaniemi, Cognitive Brain
Research Unit, University of Helsinki Laurel Trainor, Department of Psychology, McMaster University, Canada Aniruddh Patel, The Neurosciences Institute, San Diego Eckart Altenmuller, Institute for Music Physiology, Hannover, Germany Joseph Rauschecker, Georgetown Institute for Cognitive and Computational Sciences, Washington, USA Gottfried Schlaug, Beth Deaconess Medical Center and Harvard Medical School, USA Christo Pantev, Rotman Research Institute, Canada Thomas Elbert, Department of Psychology, University of Konstanz, Germany Alvaro Pascual Leone, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard Medical School, USA Fred Lerdahl, Department of Music, University of Columbia, USA Glenn Schellenberg, Department of Psychology, University of Toronto, Canada
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"There are few things more exciting than an entirely new scientific field, a new attempt to understand another aspect of our human existence - now it's music's turn. Here is a collection of papers from leaders in the discipline, trying to tease apart exactly what goes on inside the brain when it experiences music. It is a bafflingly huge subject and the editors should be applauded for bringing so much expertise to a single tome... The book is a mixed bag, some chapters are far more accessible than others to the general neuroscientist - but this is a minor criticism. Each chapter of the book plays like a section of a small orchestra, contributing to the magnificent whole." - The Lancet Neurology
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Preface
Part I: The origins of music
1: Sandra E. Trehub: Musical predisposition in infancy: an update
2: Carolyn Drake and Daisy Bertrand: The quest for universals in temporal processing in music
3: Jenny R. Saffran, Michael Loman, and Rachel Robertson: Mechanisms of musical memory in infancy
4: Ian Cross: Music, cognition, culture, and evolution
5: David Huron: Is music an evolutionary adaptation?
Part II: The musical mind
6: Stephen McAdams and Daniel Matzkin: The roots of musical variation in perceptual similarity and invariance
7: Carol L. Krumhansl and Petri Toivainen: Tonal cognition
8: Barbara Tillmann, Jamshed J. Barucha, and Emmanuel Bigand: Learning and perceiving musical structures: further insights from artificial neural networks
Part III: The neurons of music
9: Mark Tramo: Neurobiology of harmony perception
10: Catherine Liegeois-Chauvel, Kimberly Giraud, Jean-Michel Badier, Patrick Marquis, and Patrick Chauvel: Intracerebral evoked potentials in pitch perception reveal a functional asymmetry of human auditory cortex
11: Timothy D. Griffiths: The neural processing of complex sounds
Part IV: Musical brain substrates
12: John C.M. Brust: Music and the neurologist: an historical perspective
13: Isabelle Peretz: Brain specialization for music: new evidence from congenital amusia
14: Severine Samson: Cerebral substrates for musical temporal processes
15: Andrea R. Halpern: Cerebral substrates of musical imagery
16: Robert J. Zatorre: Neural specializations for tonal processing
17: Lawrence M. Parsons: Exploring the functional neuroanatomy of music performance, perception, and comprehension
18: Mireille Besson and Daniele Schon: Comparison between language and music
19: Mari Tervaniemi: Musical sound processing: EEG and MEG evidence
20: Laurel Trainor: Frontal EEG responses as a function of affective musical features
21: Aniruddh D. Patel and Evan Balaban: Cortical dynamics and the perception of tone sequence structure
22: Eckart O. Altenmuller: How many music centres are in the brain
Part V: Musical brain/brain plasticity
23: Joseph P. Rauschecker: Functional organization and plasticity of auditory cortex
24: Gottfried Schlaug and Chi Chen: The brain of musicians
25: C Pantev, A. Engelien, V. Candia, and T. Elbert: Representational cortex in musicians
26: Alvaro Pascual-Leone: The brain that makes music and is changed by it
Part VI: Relation of music to other cognitive domains
27: Fred Lerdahl: The sounds of poetry viewed as music
28: Glenn Shellenberg: Does exposure to music have beneficial side effects?
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The specification in this catalogue, including without limitation price, format, extent, number of illustrations, and month of publication, was as accurate as possible at the time the catalogue was compiled. Occasionally, due to the nature of some contractual restrictions, we are unable to ship a specific product to a particular territory. Jacket images are provisional and liable to change before publication.
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