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Neurology of Music.

The first British book on neurology in music was published over 30 years ago. Edited by Drs Macdonald Critchley and R A Henson, it was entitled "Music and the Brain" (published by Wm Heinemann Medical Books), but all of its contributors are now either retired or deceased. Since then, there...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor principal: Rose, F.Clifford
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Singapore : World Scientific, 2010.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Preface; The Mansell Bequest Symposia of the Medical Society of London; List of Contributors; Abbreviations; Chapter 1. The Evolutionary Basis of Meaning in Music: Some Neurological and Neuroscientific Implications Ian Cross; Chapter 2. Historical Perspectives on the Study of Music in Neurology Julene K. Johnson, Amy B. Graziano, and Jacky Hayward; Chapter 3. The Creative Brain: Fundamental Features, Associated Conditions and Unifying Neural Mechanisms Stavia Blunt; Chapter 4. The Neurologist in the Concert Hall and the Musician at the Bedside George K. York III.
  • Chapter 5. The Human Nervous System
  • A Clavichord? On the Use of Metaphors in the History of Modern Neurology Frank StahnischChapter 6. The Musician's Brain as a Model for Adaptive and Maladaptive Plasticity Eckart Altenmüller; Chapter 7. Temporal Co-ordination of the Two Hands in Playing the Violin Mario Wiesendanger; Chapter 8. Music as a Calibrator of Time: Auditory Processing Steve Jones; Chapter 9. Musical Reading and Writing John Brust; Chapter 10. 'Fools at Musick'
  • Thomas Willis (1621-1675) on Congenital Amusia Marjorie Lorch; Chapter 11. Musicogenic Epilepsy Jock Murray.
  • Chapter 12. Musical Hallucinations Stefan EversChapter 13. Migraine Aura as Source of Artistic Inspiration in the German 'Dark Chanteuse' Alwa Glebe Klaus Podoll; Chapter 14. Musical Palinacousis as an Aura Symptom in Persistent Aura without Infarction Klaus Podoll; Chapter 15. Coloured-Hearing Synaesthesia in Nineteenth-Century Italy Lorenzo Lorusso and Alessandro Porro; Chapter 16. Crossed Wires: Synaesthetic Responses to Music Ivan Moseley; Chapter 17. The Recognition of Music in Frontotemporal Lobar Degeneration Julene K. Johnson.
  • Chapter 18. Maurice Ravel and the Music of the Brain Ola SelnesChapter 19. Cerebrovascular Disorders of Baroque Composers Tomislav Breitenfeld, Darko Breitenfeld, and Vida Demarin; Chapter 20. From Sensibility to Madness in Nineteenth-Century Romanticism
  • Neurosyphilis in German-Speaking Composers Hansjörg Bäzner and Michael Hennerici; Chapter 21. Singing: When It Helps Gottfried Schlaug; Chapter 22. Singing Improves Word Production in Patients with Aphasia Geir Olve Skeie, Torun Einbu, and Johan Aarli; Chapter 23. Nerve Compression Syndromes in Musicians
  • A Surgeon's View Ian Winspur.
  • Chapter 24. Focal Hand Dystonia Affecting Musicians Katherine ButlerIndex.