Music Listening, Music Therapy, Phenomenology and Neuroscience

(Nancy Kaufman) #1

Appendix 3.04 Survey of


The Neurosciences and Music I


V


Conference 2011


Learning and Memory


Title, Category

Aim

Mus. Material, Cultural Ref.

Technology & Procedure

Main focus of interest

Conclusion


  1. Takako Fujioka
    Multimodal functional cortical reorganization and
    its spatio


-temporal pa

ttern

after music-

supported stroke

rehabilitation
Cat. 11: Deficit Cat. 12: Recovery


  1. Raymond MacDonald, van Wijc


k, Knox, Dodds,

Cassidy,

Alexander

Making music after stroke: using musical activities to enhance arm function

.

Cat. 11: Deficit Cat. 12:

Recovery


  1. Concetta Tomaino Effective music therapy techniques in the treatment of non


-fluent aphasia
Cat. 11: Deficit Cat. 12: Therapy

We have examined the effects of music

-supported

motor rehabilitation on functional cortical reorgan

ization in our c

ase





based study
This presentation will focus upon using musical
participation to enhance arm function recovery after stroke
This presentation will introduce working guidelines
for music therapy for aphasia

Over a 1-

month period we

probed somato

sensory,

motor, and auditory memory functions using various MEG mapping techni

ques before

and after the inter

vention of

music playing
Music technology, appropriate for use by people with different upper limb impairments after stroke
Different techni

ques

emphasizing rhythm, pitch,
memory, and vocal/oral motor components

dealing with

different symptoms

We hypothesize that multimodal neural activities underlying musical timing
processing encourage cortical reorganization

in wide are

as

of a brain damag

ed by stroke

Stroke is one of the most disabling long term conditions in the UK and loss of arm function is particularly common
Various benefits of singing have been identified: strengthened breathing and vocal ability, improved art

iculation and prosody of
speech

Post-

intervention

Improve





ments in movement of the paretic hand as well as massive multimodal shifts from abnormal to norma

l

cortical response patterns

in

somatotopic maps and auditory evoked responses
Music technology can be utilised to develop creative
activities that are enjoyable and enhance the
rehabilitation process
The efficacy of each component is enhanced or diminished by the choice of music and the way it is interactively delivered

Symposium 8

:

MUSIC: A WINDOW INTO THE WO

RLD OF AUTISM

(42

-45)

Title, Category

Aim

Mus. Material, Cultural Ref.

Technology & Procedure

Main focus of interest

Conclusion


  1. Pamela Heaton, Rory Allen, Francesca Happe, Anna Jarvinen


-Pasley,

Jennifer Mayer, J

essica

Ward
Why are musical skills preserved in autism?
Cat. 1: Pitch
Cat. 11: Disorder

Potential explanations for uneven development across functional domains in infants diagnosed with autism will be proposed and future directions for the study of
music

in autism will be

outlined

Whilst research has shown that infants who are subsequently diagnosed with autism fail to “attend” to speech, such inattention does not appear to generalize to music

Experiments conducted with verbally able children and
ad

ults with autism have
revealed a heightened
sensitivity to pitch in music and environmental sounds
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