The Sound of Silence: Can Imagining Music Improve Spatial Rotation Performance?
暂无分享,去创建一个
Helen M. Hodgetts | Nick Perham | H. Hodgetts | N. Perham | A. Lewis | J. Turner | Alex Lewis | Joanna Turner
[1] A. Nehlig. Coffee, Tea, Chocolate, and the Brain , 2004 .
[2] Jane D. Brown,et al. Sexy Media Matter: Exposure to Sexual Content in Music, Movies, Television, and Magazines Predicts Black and White Adolescents' Sexual Behavior , 2006, Pediatrics.
[3] T. Withey,et al. Liked Music Increases Spatial Rotation Performance Regardless of Tempo , 2012 .
[4] N. Perham,et al. “Not Thinking” Helps Reasoning , 2012 .
[5] C. Collet,et al. Autonomic nervous system responses correlate with mental rehearsal in volleyball training , 1998, European Journal of Applied Physiology and Occupational Physiology.
[6] L. F. Barrett,et al. Handbook of emotions, 2nd ed. , 2000 .
[7] E. Schellenberg,et al. Music and Cognitive Abilities , 2005 .
[8] David J. M. Kraemer,et al. Musical imagery: Sound of silence activates auditory cortex , 2005, Nature.
[9] N. Rickard,et al. The effect of music on cognitive performance: insight from neurobiological and animal studies. , 2005, Behavioral and cognitive neuroscience reviews.
[10] A. Dittmar,et al. Relationship between mental imagery and sporting performance , 1991, Behavioural Brain Research.
[11] J. D. Smith,et al. The role of subvocalization in auditory imagery , 1995, Neuropsychologia.
[12] M. Nieuwenstein,et al. Music training and mental imagery ability , 2000, Neuropsychologia.
[13] Susan Hallam,et al. Music Listening and Cognitive Abilities in 10‐ and 11‐Year‐Olds: The Blur Effect , 2005, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences.
[14] E. Glenn Schellenberg,et al. The Mozart Effect: An Artifact of Preference , 1999 .
[15] S. Trehub,et al. Maternal Singing Modulates Infant Arousal , 2003 .
[16] E. Schellenberg,et al. Effects of Musical Tempo and Mode on Arousal, Mood, and Spatial Abilities , 2002 .
[17] Reducing fracture risk in the oldest old: aging and the effect of pharmaceutical interventions in osteoporosis , 2007, Aging clinical and experimental research.
[18] Prelude or requiem for the ‘Mozart effect’? , 1999, Nature.
[19] Warren Brodsky,et al. The effects of music tempo on simulated driving performance and vehicular control , 2001 .
[20] S. Kosslyn,et al. Neural foundations of imagery , 2001, Nature Reviews Neuroscience.
[21] R. E. Milliman,et al. Using background music to affect the behavior of supermarket shoppers. , 1982 .
[22] R. E. Milliman,et al. The Influence of Background Music on the Behavior of Restaurant Patrons , 1986 .
[23] Steven Brown,et al. The Origins of Music: Edited by Nils L. Wallin, Björn Merker, and Steven Brown, Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 2000, xii+ 498 pages, ISBN 0-262-23206-5, US$60.00 , 2000 .
[24] C. Cornoldi,et al. Does music enhance cognitive performance in healthy older adults? The Vivaldi effect , 2007, Aging clinical and experimental research.
[25] R. Shepard,et al. Mental Rotation of Three-Dimensional Objects , 1971, Science.
[26] A. Vickers,et al. Music therapy for mood disturbance during hospitalization for autologous stem cell transplantation , 2003, Cancer.
[27] F. Bailes. The prevalence and nature of imagined music in the everyday lives of music students , 2007 .
[28] L. F. Barrett,et al. Handbook of Emotions , 1993 .
[29] D. Coakley,et al. Investigating the Enhancing Effect of Music on Autobiographical Memory in Mild Alzheimer’s Disease , 2006, Dementia and Geriatric Cognitive Disorders.
[30] T. R. Barrett,et al. Verbal hallucinations in normals, I: People who hear ‘voices’ , 1992 .
[31] H. Critchley,et al. Neural Activity Relating to Generation and Representation of Galvanic Skin Conductance Responses: A Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Study , 2000, The Journal of Neuroscience.
[32] F. Rauscher,et al. Music and spatial task performance , 1993, Nature.
[33] R. Murray,et al. The Neural Correlates of Inner Speech and Auditory Verbal Imagery in Schizophrenia: Relationship to Auditory Verbal Hallucinations , 1996, British Journal of Psychiatry.
[34] M. Good,et al. Effect of music on power, pain, depression and disability. , 2006, Journal of advanced nursing.
[35] Disliked Music can be Better for Performance than Liked Music , 2012 .
[36] Christopher F. Chabris,et al. Prelude or requiem for the ‘Mozart effect’? , 1999, Nature.
[37] Lois Hetland,et al. Listening to Music Enhances Spatial-Temporal Reasoning: Evidence for the "Mozart Effect.". , 2000 .
[38] R. Zatorre,et al. When that tune runs through your head: a PET investigation of auditory imagery for familiar melodies. , 1999, Cerebral cortex.
[39] Nick Perham,et al. Can preference for background music mediate the irrelevant sound effect , 2011 .
[40] A. Isen,et al. Positive affect and decision making. , 1993 .
[41] C Philip Beaman,et al. Earworms (stuck song syndrome): towards a natural history of intrusive thoughts. , 2010, British journal of psychology.
[42] David B. Estell,et al. The Mozart effect: Arousal, preference, and spatial performance. , 2006 .
[43] Trevor A. Harley,et al. The Psychology of Language , 1995 .
[44] D. Lukoff. Visionary Spiritual Experiences , 2007, Southern medical journal.
[45] A. King. Auditory Neuroscience: Activating the Cortex without Sound , 2006, Current Biology.