[PDF] from umontreal.caKL Hyde, RJ Zatorre… - Cerebral Cortex, 2011 - Oxford Univ Press Congenital amusia (tone deafness) is a lifelong disorder that prevents typically developing individuals from acquiring basic musical skills. Electrophysiological evidence indicates that congenital amusia is related to a musical pitch deficit that does not seem to arise from a dysfunction of the ... Cited by 13 - Related articles - All 6 versions
[PDF] from mcgill.caJ Phillips-Silver, P Toiviainen, N Gosselin, O Piché… - Neuropsychologia, 2011 - Elsevier Humans move to the beat of music. Despite the ubiquity and early emergence of this response, some individuals report being unable to feel the beat in music. We report a sample of people without special training, all of whom were proficient at perceiving and producing ... Related articles - All 7 versions
[PDF] from arxiv.orgMY Amusia, LV Chernysheva… - Arxiv preprint arXiv:1108.1013, 2011 - arxiv.org It is demonstrated for the first time that in spite of well known big similarities between atomic ionization by photons and fast electrons, a qualitative difference exists in angular anisotropy parameters of electrons knocked out in these processes. The difference is disclosed here and ...
[HTML] from frontiersin.orgB Tillmann, D Burnham, S Nguyen… - Frontiers in Auditory …, 2011 - frontiersin.org Congenital amusia is a neurogenetic disorder that affects music processing and that is ascribed to a deficit in pitch processing. ... The pitch deficit of amusia is thus not limited to music, but may compromise the ability to process and learn tonal languages. ... Related articles - Cached - All 4 versions