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Brain and Music

[ebooks] Brain and Music by Stefan Koelsch at Arts-Photography

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Studienarbeit aus dem Jahr 2005 im Fachbereich Kunst - Malerei; Note: 2;0; Ruhr-Universitauml;t Bochum (Kunstgeschichtliches Institut ); Veranstaltung: Grundposition der Moderne: Cezanne; Gauguin; Van Gogh; 11 Quellen im Literaturverzeichnis; Sprache: Deutsch; Abstract: Die vorliegende Hausarbeit befasst sich mit dem Gemauml;lde La Carriere Bibemus; was uuml;bersetzt der Steinbruch Bibemus heiszlig;t; welches in dem Jahr 1895 von Paul Ceacute;zanne geschaffen wurde. Ich werde sowohl eine knappe Biographie Paul Ceacute;zannes darbringen; als auch daraufhin folgend die sehpsychologischen und ndash;physiologischen Aspekte und die Methodik Ceacute;zannes erlauml;utern; um einen leichteren thematischen Zugriff zu der Rezeption des Werkes zu ermouml;glichen. Danach werde ich die Analyse dieses Werkes darlegen; mit inbegriffen die Bestimmung des Bildgegenstandes; wo ich mich auf allgemeine Informationen zum Gemauml;lde selbst beziehe; sowie die Bildanalyse folgen lasse. Des Weiteren komme ich am Ende dieser Hausarbeit auf einen Bildvergleich; und zwar mit dem Gemauml;lde Le Mont Sainte-Victoire vu de la carriere Bibemus ndash; Blick auf den Monte Sainte-Victoire vom Steinbruch Bibemus -; auf den Einfluss und die Innovationen; die Paul Ceacute;zanne der nachfolgenden Epoche - der Moderne ndash; und den zahlreichen Kuuml;nstlern geboten hat; zu sprechen.


#1423843 in eBooks 2012-03-22 2012-03-22File Name: B007ODNOM2


Review
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. The go-to textbook on a thrilling new domain of human discoveryBy Jeff Victoroff. M.D.Why does music have the profound effects it does on the human nervous system? Even Darwin wrestled with that question and came up baffled. HOW does music have the profound effects it does on the human nervous system? That is different question--an empirical question currently yielding to scholarly inquiries using methods of hypothesis testing that have only just become available. 30 years ago. one was obliged to either conduct experiments in psychoacoustics. or to measure peripheral responses of the autonomic nervous system. or to try to infer brain function from scalp electroencephalography [EEG]--a method from the 1930s that relies on pitifully weak head surface signals. Research on the neurobehavioral effects of music and sound has exploded since the advent of functional neuroimaging. What Dr. Koelsch and others (e.g.. Bob Zatorre at McGill) have recently done is to employ advanced imaging in elegant experiments to investigate exactly what goes on in the head when one hears (or reads. or performs. or thinks about) music. If one has. for decades. been both deeply moved by music and deeply curious about why that happens. one dreamed of this day.Brain Music is a 2012 update of Dr. Koelschs important 2000 essay on this subject. Although it is already somewhat dated. it is the best compact summary of the state of the art of which I am aware. It is. however. a textbook. not a beach read. Dr. Koelsch is not a science-popularizer. like the authors of some other very good books on this subject. He is a scientist. writing for those with scientific backgrounds. Perhaps the major stumbling block for many will be the neuroanatomy. Still. the later chapters are packed with knowledge and one could skip to them and still profit handsomely. Readers looking for a more accessible introduction to this thrilling field might prefer--for example--Dan Levitins "This is your brain on music." or even Jourdains old "Music. the brain. and ecstasy." But if one wished to teach an inspiring course on this new discipline. Brain Music would probably be the go-to textbook.2 of 4 people found the following review helpful. Unclear bookBy PianinhaIt says it gives an easy view on neuroscience and music but it never happens. The book is dense as its authors doctoral thesis.

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