Results 151 to 160 of about 179,617 (297)

Screens, Teens, and Sleep: Is the Impact of Nighttime Screen Use on Sleep Driven by Physiological Arousal?

open access: yesJournal of Sleep Research, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT Few studies have objectively measured both screens and sleep in real‐world settings. This study uses repeated measures to assess heart rate during evening screen use, providing new insights into how these behaviours relate to adolescent sleep. Screen use was recorded using wearable cameras over four nights in 70 youth (37% indigenous Māori, 42%
Kim A. Meredith‐Jones   +6 more
wiley   +1 more source

Rhythm and Popular Music

open access: yes, 2019
Abstract Chapter 9 explores how rhythm functions and affects us in popular music, restricting that term to the post-1950s period, and arguing that in such music, measured time becomes a resource for creating fields of energy that empower us as embodied human agents.
openaire   +1 more source

“It's okay to feel!”: How a music‐based pedagogical activity fosters medical students' emotional development

open access: yesMedical Education, EarlyView.
Abstract Background Emotions are an intrinsic part of medicine. However, formal medical curricula fall short in addressing the role of emotions in medicine, and the hidden curriculum often promotes emotional detachment as a core component of medical professionalism.
Marcelo B. S. Rivas   +5 more
wiley   +1 more source

Language comprehension and the rhythm of perception

open access: yesMind &Language, EarlyView.
It is widely agreed that language understanding has a distinctive phenomenology, as illustrated by phenomenal contrast cases. Yet it remains unclear how to account for the perceptual phenomenology of language experience. I advance a rhythmic account, which explains this phenomenology in terms of changes in the rhythm of sensory capacities in both ...
Alfredo Vernazzani
wiley   +1 more source

Governing and Living Through Failure: Russian Speakers in Ethnocentric Nation‐Building Projects of Estonia and Latvia

open access: yesNations and Nationalism, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT This article contributes to nationalism studies by demonstrating how states use failure as a governance tool to regulate national belonging and by showing how people experience and reinterpret failure in ways that unsettle dominant national imaginaries.
Lena Hercberga, Alina Jašina‐Schäfer
wiley   +1 more source

Digitalizing Newspaper Journalism: Instituting and Negotiating New Temporalities in the Digital Workplace

open access: yesNew Technology, Work and Employment, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT Digitalization of the labour process has occasioned the emergence of new temporal orders at work. For newspaper journalists, it has resulted in a radical reorganization of newsrooms and the temporalities of news production, offering a key site for studying this process of temporal reordering.
Xanthe Whittaker
wiley   +1 more source

Rhythm Processing Across Development: Origins, Links to Language Processing, and Perspectives for Intervention

open access: yesAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT A wealth of research has investigated rhythm processing in music and speech, revealing shared cognitive and neural correlates and potential transfer effects, as evidenced by shared benefits and shared processing difficulties, as well as effects of stimulation and training programs.
Barbara Tillmann   +2 more
wiley   +1 more source

Novel Approach to Inter‐Onset‐Interval Ratio Uncovers Music‐Like Rhythmic Patterns in Budgerigar (Melopsittacus undulatus) Warble Song

open access: yesAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT Rhythm is an essential part of human music. Recently, there has been a surge of interest in the production of rhythmicity in nonhuman animal vocalizations. Novel methods have found widespread rhythmic behaviors—including those with music‐like properties—among nonhuman animals.
Jeroen van der Aa   +3 more
wiley   +1 more source

From Finger Taps to Footsteps: Gait as a Model for Investigating and Training Rhythmic Abilities

open access: yesAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences, EarlyView.
Motor rhythmic abilities, like auditory–motor synchronization, are often assessed using finger‐tapping tasks. Here, we propose gait as a richer, more ecologically valid alternative, which engages the whole body, is continuous, and taps into both automatic and voluntary control.
Clara Ziane, Simone Dalla Bella
wiley   +1 more source

Global and Local Deviance Effects in the Processing of Temporal Patterns

open access: yesAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT Perceptual and sensorimotor events are often experienced as temporal patterns, that is, identified as sequences based on their temporal features. While current timing models propose separate mechanisms supporting the processing of single intervals and temporal patterns, they leave partially unclear whether the latter entails the processing of ...
Dunia Giomo   +3 more
wiley   +1 more source

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