Description
The transformation of music into movement takes place while dancing, singing, and playing an instrument. The human capacity for beat induction facilitates rhythmic movement to the musical beat, a capacity share with only a few animals. While Parkinson patients are limited in their locomotive abilities, they are nevertheless capable of moving fluently while listening to music, particularly music with a salient beat. Entrainment to melodic contour is a purely human capacity called relative pitch. While Parkinson patients suffer from dysprosody, they maintain their ability to sing normal melodic contour. Improvising musicians are better able to transform aurally perceived music into playing movement than classically-trained musicians. Classical musicians are characterized by higher activation of the left hemisphere, while improvising musicians additionally activate a right-hemisphere frontoparietal network dedicated to sensorimotor transformation in the context of spatially-organized hand movement. These activations may be associated with top-down influences on aural perception of music mediated by the dorsal stream, recruiting procedural knowledge of music syntax during performance.Periode | 25 apr. 2017 |
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Gehouden op | Medisch Centrum Leeuwarden, Netherlands |
Mate van erkenning | Local |
Keywords
- muziek
- menselijk brein
Gerelateerde inhoud
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Activiteiten
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Symposium 'onderwijs & improvisatie'
Activiteit: Participation in conference
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Audiomotor transformations in music
Activiteit: Invited talk
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Muziek en CI (Cochleair Implantaat)
Activiteit: Invited talk
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jury EPTA Frans Schreuderprijs (Externe Organisatie)
Activiteit: Membership of committee
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Pianoles voor CI-gebruikers: ongehoord!?
Activiteit: Invited talk
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Het plastische brein: muziek maakt de mens
Activiteit: Invited talk
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Music syntax & procedural learning: improvisation as a means, not an end
Activiteit: Invited talk
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Action-oriented predictive processing: grasping the aural world
Activiteit: Invited talk
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The musician in me: a biological perspective
Activiteit: Invited talk
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Denken met je handen: Improvisatie en het brein
Activiteit: Invited talk
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NL-BE Music Research Network Meeting I
Activiteit: Participation in conference
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Het muzikale brein: al doende leert men
Activiteit: Invited talk
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Muziekonderwijs vindt bij CI-gebruikers gehoor
Activiteit: Oral presentation
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Onderzoeksoutput
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Virtual keyboard playing by lay and expert ears
Onderzoeksoutput: Report › Academic
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Behavioral quantification of audiomotor transformations in improvising and score-dependent musicians
Onderzoeksoutput: Article › Academic › peer review
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Parkinsong: a study of singing in patients with Parkinson's Disease
Onderzoeksoutput: Poster › Other research output
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Instrumental attuning: the embodiment of higher-level musical features
Onderzoeksoutput: Poster › Other research output
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Differential parietal and temporal contributions to music perception in improvising and score-dependent musicians, an fMRI study
Onderzoeksoutput: Article › Academic › peer review
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Non score-dependency: theory and assessment
Onderzoeksoutput: Contribution to conference proceeding › Academic › peer review
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Cerebral activations related to audition-driven performance imagery in professional musicians
Onderzoeksoutput: Article › Academic › peer review
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Audiomotor transformations in improvising and score-dependent musicians
Onderzoeksoutput: Poster › Other research output
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Speech dysprosody but no music ‘dysprosody’ in Parkinson's disease
Onderzoeksoutput: Article › Academic › peer review
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De onbewuste pianist
Onderzoeksoutput: Article › Professional
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The role of cerebral resonance behavior in the control of music performance: an fMRI study
Onderzoeksoutput: Poster › Other research output
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Cerebral activations in highly-skilled keyboard performers: an fMRI study
Onderzoeksoutput: Poster › Other research output
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Non score-dependency: theory and assessment
Onderzoeksoutput: Poster › Other research output
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The role of cerebral resonance behavior in the control of music performance: an fMRI study
Onderzoeksoutput: Contribution to conference proceeding › Academic › peer review
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The cerebral organization of audiomotor transformations in music
Onderzoeksoutput: PhD Research external, graduation external