Creating Music from Chaos
... The application of Dabby’s method to jazz improvisation produced very favorable results. Of the two standards attempted, the Blue Trane versions came out better, as the 16th notes present in the melody of Take Five caused 16th note syncopation, which in turn causes the solo to sound unsynchronized ...
... The application of Dabby’s method to jazz improvisation produced very favorable results. Of the two standards attempted, the Blue Trane versions came out better, as the 16th notes present in the melody of Take Five caused 16th note syncopation, which in turn causes the solo to sound unsynchronized ...
Reimer_Thesis-Abstract-Final
... In the context of popular music, generations of drummers have explored new musical and technical possibilities of drumset performance. It is this history that remains linked to the drumset even when crossing over into the context of contemporary composition. Drummers in popular music have influenced ...
... In the context of popular music, generations of drummers have explored new musical and technical possibilities of drumset performance. It is this history that remains linked to the drumset even when crossing over into the context of contemporary composition. Drummers in popular music have influenced ...
Discussion Acknowledgments References Report Background and
... Negative items were associated with more ‘‘remember’’ responses and ‘‘recollective’’ responses (computed following Yonelinas, Kroll, Dobbins, Lazzara, & Knight, 1998) than neutral items in the ‘‘easy’’ encoding and retrieval condition (t test, p < :01Þ. This result with words, together with the resu ...
... Negative items were associated with more ‘‘remember’’ responses and ‘‘recollective’’ responses (computed following Yonelinas, Kroll, Dobbins, Lazzara, & Knight, 1998) than neutral items in the ‘‘easy’’ encoding and retrieval condition (t test, p < :01Þ. This result with words, together with the resu ...
NOBA Memory (Encoding, Storage, Retrieval)
... tragedies, such as terrorist attacks, often create vivid memories in those who witnessed them. But even those of us not directly involved in such events may have vivid memories of them, including memories of first hearing about them. For example, many people are able to recall their exact physical l ...
... tragedies, such as terrorist attacks, often create vivid memories in those who witnessed them. But even those of us not directly involved in such events may have vivid memories of them, including memories of first hearing about them. For example, many people are able to recall their exact physical l ...
Brain networks underlying episodic memory retrieval
... memory. Reminiscent of electrophysiological findings in primates [4], fMRI studies have reported that perirhinal activity covaries inversely with the familiarity of recognition memory test items (e.g., [5]). These fMRI results are consistent with evidence from animal lesion studies [6] and a human s ...
... memory. Reminiscent of electrophysiological findings in primates [4], fMRI studies have reported that perirhinal activity covaries inversely with the familiarity of recognition memory test items (e.g., [5]). These fMRI results are consistent with evidence from animal lesion studies [6] and a human s ...
If Somebody Knows About that Nose, Itâ•Žs Not the Forgetful Maid
... revisionary nature of memory, I propose that in Tristram Shandy, revisionary memory not only occurs naturally, but that it is spurred and even heightened according to the environment in which recall is evoked. In order to understand the crucial role that an overloaded environment plays in memory rec ...
... revisionary nature of memory, I propose that in Tristram Shandy, revisionary memory not only occurs naturally, but that it is spurred and even heightened according to the environment in which recall is evoked. In order to understand the crucial role that an overloaded environment plays in memory rec ...
Maple Leaf Rag - Bishop Ireton
... Identifying a song by the rhythm of its melody means you recognize its______ ...
... Identifying a song by the rhythm of its melody means you recognize its______ ...
Lecture 4
... Remember that unlike any other part of the musical construction, the melody will evoke the human sentiments more directly than anything else. Examples ...
... Remember that unlike any other part of the musical construction, the melody will evoke the human sentiments more directly than anything else. Examples ...
Document
... discarding useless information in favor of storing more salient memories. Recent work in Drosophila has emphasized that the forgetting of memories formed during aversive olfactory conditioning is an active process of the brain, with molecular and neuronal substrates that are distinct from the proces ...
... discarding useless information in favor of storing more salient memories. Recent work in Drosophila has emphasized that the forgetting of memories formed during aversive olfactory conditioning is an active process of the brain, with molecular and neuronal substrates that are distinct from the proces ...
biological conditions for the emergence of musical arts in a
... and structured sequences and superpositions of discrete sounds consisting mainly of complex tones, which are periodic vibrations of a frequency lying in the audible range between approximately 30 and 15,000 Hz. Periodic oscillations can always be decomposed into a superposition of sinusoidal, single ...
... and structured sequences and superpositions of discrete sounds consisting mainly of complex tones, which are periodic vibrations of a frequency lying in the audible range between approximately 30 and 15,000 Hz. Periodic oscillations can always be decomposed into a superposition of sinusoidal, single ...
Requirements for Cataloging Music To catalog music, a cataloger
... Be familiar with music history and theory. Know forms, genres, and instruments corresponding to specific time periods and/or locations. For example, know that “continuo” is a 17th-18th century medium of performance which may mean one or more specific instruments, and may or may not be written in ...
... Be familiar with music history and theory. Know forms, genres, and instruments corresponding to specific time periods and/or locations. For example, know that “continuo” is a 17th-18th century medium of performance which may mean one or more specific instruments, and may or may not be written in ...
Document
... Assessment criterions for the synaptic hypothesis: (From Martin and Morris 2002) 1. DETECTABILITY: If an animal displays memory of some previous experience (or has learnt a new task), a change in synaptic efficacy should be detectable somewhere in its nervous system. 2. MIMICRY: If it were possible ...
... Assessment criterions for the synaptic hypothesis: (From Martin and Morris 2002) 1. DETECTABILITY: If an animal displays memory of some previous experience (or has learnt a new task), a change in synaptic efficacy should be detectable somewhere in its nervous system. 2. MIMICRY: If it were possible ...
AS EDEXCEL PSYCHOLOGY 2008 ONWARDS
... Maybe the nature of the task, i.e., what is to be recalled is more important than depth of processing. Morris (1977) found that lists of words were better recalled if they were processed phonetically rather than semantically. Other factors can also affect how well-remembered information is independe ...
... Maybe the nature of the task, i.e., what is to be recalled is more important than depth of processing. Morris (1977) found that lists of words were better recalled if they were processed phonetically rather than semantically. Other factors can also affect how well-remembered information is independe ...
17-1 Chapter 17 ACTIVITIES INVOLVING THE CEREBRAL
... self, family, or country. The person may not even be aware that the evaluation is occurring. Emotion is either pleasant or unpleasant and need not be the same to every individual. It is expressed outwardly in the form of facial expressions, gestures, vocalizations, body postures, and other movements ...
... self, family, or country. The person may not even be aware that the evaluation is occurring. Emotion is either pleasant or unpleasant and need not be the same to every individual. It is expressed outwardly in the form of facial expressions, gestures, vocalizations, body postures, and other movements ...
The power of music - Oxford Academic
... reduced to passive listening. One has to go to a concert, or a church or a musical festival, to recapture the collective excitement and bonding of music. In such a situation, there seems to be an actual binding of nervous systems, the unification of an audience by a veritable ‘neurogamy’ (to use a w ...
... reduced to passive listening. One has to go to a concert, or a church or a musical festival, to recapture the collective excitement and bonding of music. In such a situation, there seems to be an actual binding of nervous systems, the unification of an audience by a veritable ‘neurogamy’ (to use a w ...
Imagination and the Mind`s Ear - American Society for Aesthetics
... kind of sensory or perceptual imagination, and should not be incorporated into a propositional model of imagination. I further argue that musical imagery differs in important respects both from visual imagery and from other types of auditory imagery, such as inner speech. This project makes a contri ...
... kind of sensory or perceptual imagination, and should not be incorporated into a propositional model of imagination. I further argue that musical imagery differs in important respects both from visual imagery and from other types of auditory imagery, such as inner speech. This project makes a contri ...
PDF
... fits much expenditure data (t is time, a and b are constants that vary by expenditure type ...
... fits much expenditure data (t is time, a and b are constants that vary by expenditure type ...
Report Decoding Individual Episodic Memory Traces in the Human
... task where the participant was allowed to decide which of the three episodes they would recall on each trial (for the statistical dependencies that result from this free choice behavior, see Table S1). Here, the cue period was replaced with a decision period, during which the participant decided whi ...
... task where the participant was allowed to decide which of the three episodes they would recall on each trial (for the statistical dependencies that result from this free choice behavior, see Table S1). Here, the cue period was replaced with a decision period, during which the participant decided whi ...
M V Term
... Pleasing combination of two or three tones played together in the background while a melody is being played Harmony also refers to the study of chord progressions ...
... Pleasing combination of two or three tones played together in the background while a melody is being played Harmony also refers to the study of chord progressions ...
memory and cognition - Global Anatomy Home Page
... affects recent memories but not old ones that have already been consolidated in the cortex. Old memories are the result of accumulations of synaptic changes in the cortex as a result of multiple reinstatements of the memory. Eventually, the cortical representations come to be self-sufficient, and at ...
... affects recent memories but not old ones that have already been consolidated in the cortex. Old memories are the result of accumulations of synaptic changes in the cortex as a result of multiple reinstatements of the memory. Eventually, the cortical representations come to be self-sufficient, and at ...
Reactivation, retrieval, replay and reconsolidation in and out of
... A decade of memory reconsolidation is really four decades. The story begins in the 1960s when post-retrieval amnesia was first revealed by Donald Lewis. He showed that temporally graded retrograde amnesia could be obtained for a well-established memory in rats, if that memory were activated by a rem ...
... A decade of memory reconsolidation is really four decades. The story begins in the 1960s when post-retrieval amnesia was first revealed by Donald Lewis. He showed that temporally graded retrograde amnesia could be obtained for a well-established memory in rats, if that memory were activated by a rem ...
effect of glycyrrhiza glabra root extract on learning and memory in
... Memory is the ability of an individual to record sensory stimuli, events, information and etc., retain them over a short or long period of time and recall the same at a later date when needed 5. Learning is the process of acquiring knowledge about the world and memory could be considered as the rete ...
... Memory is the ability of an individual to record sensory stimuli, events, information and etc., retain them over a short or long period of time and recall the same at a later date when needed 5. Learning is the process of acquiring knowledge about the world and memory could be considered as the rete ...
PDF - ib psych notes
... - They were asked to draw what they see with their left hand (the cannot see their left hand), subjects drew a Dollar Sign. - When asked what they had just drawn, they would tell the experimenter "A Question Mark". - If an object was felt by the left hand, it can only be recognized by the left hand ...
... - They were asked to draw what they see with their left hand (the cannot see their left hand), subjects drew a Dollar Sign. - When asked what they had just drawn, they would tell the experimenter "A Question Mark". - If an object was felt by the left hand, it can only be recognized by the left hand ...
Effects of Glycyrrhiza glabra Root Extract on Learning
... intellectual functioning that interferes with normal life functions and is usually used to describe people who have two or more major life functions impaired or lost such as memory, language, perception, judgment or reasoning; they may lose emotional and behavioral control, develop personality chang ...
... intellectual functioning that interferes with normal life functions and is usually used to describe people who have two or more major life functions impaired or lost such as memory, language, perception, judgment or reasoning; they may lose emotional and behavioral control, develop personality chang ...
THE EMOTIOGENIC BRAIN STRUCTURES IN CONDITIONING
... 2. What determines the i~nfluenceof emotiogenic structures on memory: the activation of the emotiogenic structures during the presentation of the unconditioned stimulus, or the brief residual process in these structures, or even long-term retention (perhaps, for life) of memory in the emotiogenic st ...
... 2. What determines the i~nfluenceof emotiogenic structures on memory: the activation of the emotiogenic structures during the presentation of the unconditioned stimulus, or the brief residual process in these structures, or even long-term retention (perhaps, for life) of memory in the emotiogenic st ...