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Acta Crystallogr E Crystallogr Commun
June 2023
Department of Chemistry, University of Manchester, M13 9PL, United Kingdom.
We have selected a set of ten 'golden oldies', diverse crystallography articles to illustrate important moments in the development of our field of science and which form landmark papers in crystallography. They are a mixture of 'science pull and technology push'. For each of our choices, we firstly created a new title that emphasizes how the paper's importance worked out from today's perspective.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCortex
December 2018
Cognitive Brain Research Unit, Department of Psychology and Logopedics, University of Helsinki, Finland; Faculty of Medicine, University of Turku, Finland.
During the last decades, there have been major advances in mapping the brain regions that underlie our ability to perceive, experience, and produce music and how musical training can shape the structure and function of the brain. This progress has fueled and renewed clinical interest towards uncovering the neural basis for the impaired or preserved processing of music in different neurological disorders and how music-based interventions can be used in their rehabilitation and care. This article reviews our contribution to and the state-of-the-art of this field.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Acad Audiol
January 2018
Department of Neurosciences (ExpORL), KU Leuven, Leuven, Belgium.
Background: Although for most cochlear implant (CI) users good speech understanding is reached (at least in quiet environments), the perception and the appraisal of music are generally unsatisfactory.
Purpose: The improvement in music appraisal was evaluated in CI participants by using a stereo music preprocessing scheme implemented on a take-home device, in a comfortable listening environment. The preprocessing allowed adjusting the balance among vocals/bass/drums and other instruments, and was evaluated for different genres of music.
The longstanding debate between the homology and omnivorism approaches to the class bases of cultural tastes and practices rages on in cultural sociology. The homology thesis claims that class positions throughout the class hierarchy are accompanied by specified cultural tastes and specialized modes of appreciating them while the cultural omnivorism thesis contends that elites are (increasingly) characterized by a breadth of cultural tastes of any and all kinds. This study tests the applicability of these theses to musical tastes in Canada through the application of multiple correspondence analysis, latent class analysis, and logistic regression modeling to original telephone survey data (n = 1,595) from Toronto and Vancouver.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRadiology
January 2015
From the Radiology Editorial Office, 800 Boylston St, 15th Floor, Boston, MA 02119.
Online supplemental material is available for this article.
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