TORONTO, Ontario (CTV Network) — Researchers are diving deeper into a little known avenue of treatment for those with medication-resistant epilepsy: listening to classical music. But not just any ...
Dartmouth researchers are exploring why Mozart’s Sonata for Two Pianos in D Major decreases abnormal epileptic activity in the brain. “There were intermittent reports as well as small studies ...
In a now well-known 1993 paper in Nature called "Music and spatial task performance", Frances H. Rauscher and her colleagues report that participants who were exposed to the first movement "allegro ...
Music is transportive, and can take us to another world or time. Now, we know that certain tunes can also improve our health. According to a recent study published in the journal Scientific Reports, ...
Could this be the return of the “Mozart effect”? In 1993, researchers reported that after college students listened to a particular Mozart piano sonata for 10 minutes, they showed better spatial ...
Listening to Mozart isn’t just an enjoyable diversion, it might also improve health. In a remarkable study, researchers claim that epileptic patients listening to the Austrian composer are prone to ...
The first movement of Mozart’s Sonata for Two Pianos in D (K. 448). Joe Bowie is the male soloist, and the two pianists are Emanuel Ax and Yoko Nozaki. The scenic design is by Howard Hodgkin.
A rat listens to a clip of Mozart’s Sonata for Two Pianos in D Major (K. 448) as it is played through a speaker. VIDEO: ITO ET AL/BIO-INTELLIGENT SYSTEMS LAB/THE UNIVERSITY OF TOKYO When a good song ...
Flipping through a dusty folder of unidentified music scores in Budapest's national library, Hungarian scholar Balazs Mikusi's heart skipped a beat when he came across four pages of the score of a ...
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