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Education
The Musical Neurons Edited by Bruno Colombo PDF [EN] screenshot
2022 | Springer Cham | ISBN: 9783031081323 | PDF: 7.25 MB | 160 Pages | PDF
This book explores connections between music, neural activations and brain plasticity, in order to better understand its associated psychological and physiological effects. The final goal is to focus on the positive effects of music to treat neurological disorders, establishing a new co-ordination between different brain areas to improve both mental illness and wellbeing. A secondary goal is to analyse the role of music at a psycho-sociological level, to understand both the transformation of music into a cultural model and the vision of music as an innate instinct. Music is able to create both emotions and volitional processes. The application of new neuroimaging techniques allows us to explore and evaluate with accuracy what happens in our brain during the creative and artistic performance. A wide range of brain regions are recruited for creative tasks, and music has the opportunity to help in enhance and reset some brain pathological disturbances being also able to ameliorate and restore some rhythmic body activities such as sleep, movement and co-ordination.
The book represents a valuable and innovative tool both for neurologists as well as healthcare professionals involved in the management of neurological disorders.


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This is something every professional musician should study—or at least be familiar with: the neurological processes behind how the brain engages with music. It all starts with the ear, but since the 21st century, neuroscience has made it clear to doctors worldwide that hearing is fundamentally a brain process. It’s no longer just about the hammer, anvil, and stirrup; from the cochlea onward, the process is entirely neural, with a complex web of signals reaching our “human CPU.”

This is one reason why professional musicians no longer buy amateur keyboards. Our hearing—essentially our brain—registers every sample, and over time, we begin to tire of repetitive sounds. We may not understand it consciously, but psychologically, we start to feel bored or uninspired.

That’s why Kontakt has become the industry standard: its sound libraries are so rich and varied that the ear—and the brain—never get tired.

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