Does brain react on Indian music? - A functional magnetic resonance imaging study

Listening to music, as per clinical neuro science, involves many cognitive components with distinct brain substrates and its study has advanced greatly in the last three decades. But the studies of Indian music and its influence in the brain have not yet been studied. This article presents sequence...

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Published in2008 IEEE International Joint Conference on Neural Networks (IEEE World Congress on Computational Intelligence) Vol. 10; pp. 2696 - 2702
Main Authors Satheeshkumar, J., Arumugaperumal, S., Rajesh, R., Kesavadas, C.
Format Conference Proceeding Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published IEEE 01.06.2008
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Summary:Listening to music, as per clinical neuro science, involves many cognitive components with distinct brain substrates and its study has advanced greatly in the last three decades. But the studies of Indian music and its influence in the brain have not yet been studied. This article presents sequence of image processing steps using statistical parametric mapping for the analysis of fMRI brain structures for studying the influence of two Indian ragas namely Sankarabnam and Madhyamavathi on a non-musician brain. The results shows that ragas have a very good influence on non-musician and also shows that raga named Madhyamavathi has influenced the subject more than Sankarabranam.
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ISBN:1424418208
9781424418206
9781424432196
1424432197
ISSN:2161-4393
1522-4899
DOI:10.1109/IJCNN.2008.4634176