I heard there was a secret chord : music as medicine / Daniel J. Levitin.
Publisher: New York, NY : W.W. Norton and Company, [2024]Copyright date: ©2024Edition: First editionDescription: viii, 405 pages : illustrations ; 24 cmContent type:- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 1324036184
- 9781324036180
- 781.1/1 23/eng/20240325
- ML3920 .L666 2024
Item type | Current library | Shelving location | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
New Book | NMC Library | New Book Shelf | ML3920 .L666 2024 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Checked out | 05/09/2025 | 33039001527414 |
Browsing NMC Library shelves, Shelving location: New Book Shelf Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
LC212.2 J48 2024 Everything I learned about racism I learned in school / | LC1099.3 .H335 2015 Culturally responsive teaching and the brain : promoting authentic engagement and rigor among culturally and linguistically diverse students / | LC4015 .S88 2023 Sustaining disabled youth : centering disability in asset pedagogies / | ML3920 .L666 2024 I heard there was a secret chord : music as medicine / | N72 .P6 M378 2019 Protest! : a history of social and political protest graphics / | N8110 .B35 2023 Balthazar : a Black African king in Medieval and Renaissance art / | NC703 .M33 2005 Drawing distinctions : the varieties of graphic expression / |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 344-383) and index.
A musical species -- If I only had a brain : the neuroanatomy of music -- Oh, the shark bites : musical memory -- Look at me now : attention -- Daydream believer : the brain's "default mode," introspection, and meditation -- Interlude -- Music, movement, and movement disorders -- Parkinson's disease -- Trauma -- Mental health -- Memory loss, dementia, Alzheimer's disease, and stroke -- Pain -- Neurodevelopmental disorders -- Learning how to fly -- Music in everyday life -- Fate knocking on your door : précis to a theory of musical meaning -- Music medicine, mystery, and possibility.
"Neuroscientist and New York Times bestselling author of This Is Your Brain on Music Daniel J. Levitin reveals how the deep connections between music and the human brain can be harnessed for healing. Music is perhaps one of humanity's oldest medicines as well as its most universal: from China to the Ottoman Empire, Europe to Africa and pre-colonial South America, cultures have developed rich traditions for using sound and rhythm to ease suffering, spur healing, and calm the mind. Despite this history, musical therapy has long been considered the remit of ancient practice and alternative medicine, if not outright quackery and pseudoscience. In the last decade, however, an overwhelming body of scientific evidence has emerged that persuasively argues music can offer profoundly effective treatment for a whole host of ailments, from Alzheimer's to PTSD, depression, pain, and cognitive injury. It is, in short, one of the most potent and remarkably promising new therapies available today. A work of dazzling ideas, cutting-edge research, and joyful celebration of the human mind, I Heard There Was a Secret Chord explores the critical role music has played in human evolution, illuminating how the story of the human brain is inseparable from the creative enterprise of music that has bound cultures together throughout history. Music insinuates itself into our earliest memories; it is intimately connected to our emotional regulation and cognition; its shared rhythms and sounds are essential to our social behaviors. As neuroscientist Daniel J. Levitin demonstrates in this mind-expanding follow-up to This Is Your Brain on Music--which revolutionized our understanding of the neuroscience of song--medical researchers are now finding that these same deep connections can be harnessed to create profound benefits for those both young and old"-- Provided by publisher.
There are no comments on this title.