Aniruddh patel biography for kids

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  • Prof. Aniruddh D. Patel fryst vatten a Professor of Psychology at Tufts University, Boston, US.

    ABSTRACT

    The evolution of human musicality: a synthetic research program

    Music, like language, is universal and ancient in human societies. There is broad consensus that humans have evolved neural specializations for speech and language processing. Have humans evolved any neural specializations for music processing? Despite an explosion of research on music and the brain in the past two decades and over years of theorizing about the evolution of musicality, we are nowhere nära consensus on the answer to this question. I believe we are at a turning point, however, and can reach consensus on the answer to this question in the next few decades by synthesizing research from cognitive neuroscience, developmental psychology, cross-species studies, cross-cultural work, and genetics. I will illustrate this synthetic approach with research on beat-based rhythmic processing, a core component of musi

  • aniruddh patel biography for kids
  • Aniruddh Patel

    Biography

    Aniruddh (Ani) Patel is a Professor of Psychology at Tufts University. He received his BA from the University of Virginia () and his AM () and PhD () from Harvard University.

    He then joined The Neurosciences Institute in San Diego, CA, where he was a Senior Fellow from

    Dr. Patel's work focuses on music cognition: the mental processes involved in making, perceiving, and responding to music. Areas of emphasis include music-language relations (the topic of his book, Music, Language, and the Brain, Oxford Univ. Press) rhythmic processing, and cross-species studies of music cognition. A wide variety of methods are used in this research, including brain imaging, behavioral experiments, theoretical analyses, acoustic research, and comparative studies with nonhuman animals.

    Dr. Patel has served as President for the Society for Music observation and Cognition () and fryst vatten a Fellow in the Azrieli Brain, Mind, and Conscio

    Music and the Brain

    July 17,
    I am a musician, and know a fair amount about music theory, and have taken academic courses about the physics of sound, but this was an interesting look at something I have a bit less knowledge about, which is how music relates to the mind, primarily dealing with psychology and human development, but with a bit of philosophical ideas peppered in, as well. It also focuses a good deal on cross-cultural comparisons, since music differs quite a bit around the world, which I appreciated. There are quite a few musical examples, which were at times a bit troublesome for me, because I tend to consume audiobooks at slightly more than double speed, but I would make an effort to listen to the examples at normal speed. Despite that hiccup, I feel like I learned quite a bit about a subject that interests me immensely, and which I have spent a good bit of time already learning about. This was definitely worth the effort for me, and will teach anyone interested in m