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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Irène Deliège (, University of Liège, Belgium) , Jane Davidson (, University of Western Australia, Australia)Publisher: Oxford University Press Imprint: Oxford University Press Dimensions: Width: 16.80cm , Height: 3.50cm , Length: 23.10cm Weight: 0.662kg ISBN: 9780199581566ISBN 10: 0199581568 Pages: 444 Publication Date: 17 February 2011 Audience: College/higher education , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order ![]() Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of ContentsJane Davidson and Irène Deliège: Prelude John Sloboda and his contribution 1: Michel Imberty: Music, linguistics and cognition 2: Eric Fillenz Clarke: 'What are the important questions?' A reflection Motivating Musical Lives 3: Susan O'Neill: Developing a young musician's growth mindset: the role of motivation, self-theories and resiliency. 4: Alexandra Lamont: Negotiating Music in the Real World: development, motivation, process and effect 5: Jane Davidson: Musical Participation: Expectations, Experiences and Outcomes Music and Emotion 6: Alf Gabrielsson: How do Strong Experiences with Music (SEM) relate to experiences in everyday listening to music? 7: Patrik N. Juslin: Music and Emotion: Seven Questions, Seven Answers Sloboda's Recall Paradigm 8: Mario Baroni, Rossana Dalmonte and Roberto Caterina: Perception of melody. An empirical approach 9: Daniel Muellensiefen and Geraint A. Wiggins: Sloboda's recall paradigm for melodic memory: A new, computational perspective Musical Achievement and Expertise 10: Frederick A. Seddon: Musical encounters of the temporary kind 11: Antonia Ivaldi: Routes to Adolescent Musical Expertise 12: Reinhard Kopiez: The musical child prodigy (Wunderkind) in music history: A historiometric analysis 13: Adam Ockelford: : Evidence from a Savant of how Atonal Music is Processed in Cognition' Examining Musical Performance 14: Nicholas J. Cook: Off the record: performance, history, and musical logic 15: Andreas Lehmann: Expressive Variants in the Opening Robert Schumann's Arlequin (from Carnaval, op. 9): 54 Pianists' Interpretations of a Metrical Ambiguity 16: Geoff Luck: Quantifying the beat-inducing properties of conductors' temporal gestures, and conductor-musician synchronization 17: Jane Ginsborg and Roger Chaffin: Performance cues in singing: Evidence from practice and recall Music and cultural integration 18: Arild Bergh: Emotions in motion: Transforming conflict with the help of music 19: Richard Parncutt and Angelika Dorfer: The role of music in the integration of cultural minorities Irène Deliège: PostludeReviews<br> I can recommend Music and the Mind for several additional reasons. One is the sheer sense of satisfaction and inspiration in seeing how one person can have such a rich, multifarious impact on a research area of substantial general interest. On a related note, <br>aside from providing a representative snapshot of high-quality and varied current research on music psychology, Music and the Mind deserves a special recommendation for individuals who may be new to the psychology of music and wish to learn more about this <br>fundamentally human and engaging area of research. -- Aaron Kozbelt, PsycCRITIQUES<p><br> """I can recommend Music and the Mind for several additional reasons. One is the sheer sense of satisfaction and inspiration in seeing how one person can have such a rich, multifarious impact on a research area of substantial general interest. On a related note, aside from providing a representative snapshot of high-quality and varied current research on music psychology, Music and the Mind deserves a special recommendation for individuals who may be new to the psychology of music and wish to learn more about this fundamentally human and engaging area of research."" -- Aaron Kozbelt, PsycCRITIQUES" I can recommend Music and the Mind for several additional reasons. One is the sheer sense of satisfaction and inspiration in seeing how one person can have such a rich, multifarious impact on a research area of substantial general interest. On a related note, aside from providing a representative snapshot of high-quality and varied current research on music psychology, Music and the Mind deserves a special recommendation for individuals who may be new to the psychology of music and wish to learn more about this fundamentally human and engaging area of research. -- Aaron Kozbelt, PsycCRITIQUES Author InformationIrène Deliège obtained her qualifications at the Royal Conservatory of Brussels. After a twenty year career as a music teacher, she retrained in psychology and obtained her PhD in 1991 from the University of Liège where she was responsible for the Unit of Research in Psychology of Music. A founding member of ESCOM, she has acted since its inception as permanent secretary and Editor of the Journal MUSICÆ SCIENTIÆ. She is the author of several articles and co-edited books dedicated to music perception. Jane Davidson is the current Callaway/Tunely Chair of Music at the University of Western Australia. She has published extensively within psychology of music with research topics including expressive body movement, collaborative performance, music learning and ability, and singing. Her first academic appointment was at University of Keele between 1991-1993, where she worked as a post-doctoral fellow with John Sloboda and Michael Howe on an innovatory study of the biographical determinants of musical abilities. This led to more than 20 joint peer-reviewed publications. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |