The Cognitive Neuroscience of Music
23.Pantev, C., O. Bertrand, C. Eulitz,et al. (1995) Specific tonotopic organizations of different areas of the human auditory co ...
42.Aitkin, L. M., M. M. Merzenich, D. R. F. Irvine,et al. (1986) Frequency representation in audi- tory cortex of the common mar ...
11 THE NEURAL PROCESSING OF COMPLEX SOUNDS . Abstract This chapter considers the temporal processing ...
the level of hundreds of milliseconds or seconds. Higher-order structure might itself be subdivided into ‘local patterns’ (e.g. ...
The human auditory system^18 also contains a rich descending system that could mold behaviourally significant sounds such as mus ...
ascending auditory pathway to at least one of the auditory cortices. The rare condition of cortical deafness occurs following le ...
Taken together these two studies are consistent with the pathway up to and including the primary auditory cortex being a necessa ...
that a single intact pathway to the right auditory cortex is not a sufficient substrate for the normal perception of modulation. ...
Models for this temporal integration mechanism^31 allow it to occur at an early stage in the auditory pathway, perhaps as early ...
study and frontal opercula in a number of other studies. The patterns of activation shown are similar to those demonstrated by s ...
may provide a sufficient mechanism for the processing of spectrotemporal features of indi- vidual sounds. Subsequent processing ...
18.Moore, J. K.(1994) The human brainstem auditory pathway. In R. K. Jackier and D. E. Brackmann (eds) Neurotology. St. Louis, M ...
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12 MUSIC AND THE NEUROLOGIST: A HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE . . Abstract Neurological disorders affecting musica ...
the clearest signs of not being [adaptive]’,^3 yet in all cultures most people enjoy music. On the other hand, it takes severe m ...
and the hallucinations are often pleasurable rather than frightening or threatening. Some subjects sing along with the music, an ...
one of whom could sing with words and the other without words;^24 a right-handed man with largely expressive aphasia following l ...
pitch and continued to listen to music critically—but he could no longer write or dictate music and thus could not compose the p ...
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