
There is so much amazing work in the world. At the
Institute for Music and Brain Science a wide variety of people study music and the brain from different perspectives.
Hearing Healing & Helping Through Music is their motto. What could be better! I love their logo, too. So 'brainy'. Even their url: brainmusic. I always knew my brain had its own songs to sing, if I could only figure out how to hear them. (And, no, this is not the same as the ringing in my ears.)
The Center for Arts, Science and Technology at Stanford is hosting a talk this month with a speaker from the brainmusic people. Of course their url is brainwaves! I hope they don't mind my reposting their information here. Nobody knows about my blog anyway, so nobody will even see it! But, hey, nobody, try and go. I'll see you there.
February 8, 2010 - 5:30 PM
"Neurobiological Foundations for the Theory of Harmony in Western Tonal Music"
Mark Tramo MD, Ph.D.
Director, The Institute for Music & Brain Science
Associate Professor of Neurology, David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA
Adjunct Professor of Music, Herb Alpert School of Music at UCLA
Faculty Fellow, Harvard University Mind Brain & Behavior Interfaculty Initiative
Research Affiliate, M.I.T. Research Laboratory of Electronics
ASCAP/NARAS
www.BrainMusic.org
March 1, 2010 - 5:30 PM
"Music, Memories, and the Brain"
A talk exploring music-evoked autobiographical memories and associated emotions
Petr Janata, Ph.D.
Associate Professor, UC Davis Psychology Department Center for Mind and Brain
Music-evoked autobiographical memories and associated emotions are poignant examples of how music engages the brain. Janata binds music theory, cognitive psychology, and computational modeling to generate intuitive animations of music moving about in tonal space (the system of major and minor keys). He then shows how the unique tonal movements of individual excerpts of popular music can be used in conjunction with neuroimaging experiments to identify brain networks that support the experiencing of memories and emotions evoked by the music.