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Early Years Educator, 2010
An unexpected partnership between children's centres and a Lancashire Sinfonietta orchestra is using the music and inspiration of Mozart and Tchaikovsky to change children’ lives in Burnley, Lancashire
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An unexpected partnership between children's centres and a Lancashire Sinfonietta orchestra is using the music and inspiration of Mozart and Tchaikovsky to change children’ lives in Burnley, Lancashire
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ANOTHER FAILURE TO GENERALIZE THE MOZART EFFECT
Psychological Reports, 2000Several studies have not replicated Rauscher, Shaw, and Ky's 1993 finding that 10 minutes of exposure to Mozart piano music temporarily enhanced performance on three spatial reasoning tasks. Later Rauscher and Shaw argued that enhanced performance is unlikely unless three conditions are met.
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Route-Learning and the Mozart Effect
Psychology of Music, 2004The ‘Mozart effect’ refers to an increase in spatial reasoning performance following exposure to music composed by Mozart. Empirical tests of the effect have resulted in an inconsistent pattern of findings with some studies producing the effect and others failing to do so. The majority of the investigations have relied on paper-and-pencil tests. It is
Jackson, C S, Tlauka, Michael
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Mozart Effect: Music for Newborns
2018Packaging and accompanying booklet from audiocassette recording of "Mozart Effect: Music for Newborns."
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Discordant views on the ‘Mozart effect’
Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 1999Research reported by Rauscher et al. in 1993 suggested that listening to music by Mozart improved performance on an intelligence test1xMusic and spatial task performance. Rauscher, F.H., Shaw, G.L., and Ky, K.N. Nature. 1993; 365: 611Crossref | PubMedSee all References. That is, after listening to Mozart’s Sonata for Two Pianos in D Major, K.
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Journal of Applied Developmental Psychology, 2002
Stephanie M. Jones, Edward Zigler
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Stephanie M. Jones, Edward Zigler
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[Epilepsy, Mozart and his sonata K.448: is the «Mozart effect» therapeutic?]
Revista de neurologia, 2018To present a review of the so-called «Mozart effect», to explain why Mozart and his sonata K.448 were chosen, and to review the available literature on the treatment of epilepsy with that sonata.Profuse literature exists on the cerebral mechanisms that allow us to perceive, process and respond to the musical stimulus. Cerebral plasticity, especially in
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