Today is the day, and we are ready! We can't wait to meet all of you, either in-person or in GatherTown. We warmly welcome you to SysMus '24! Let's go! ??
关于我们
The international conference series for students of systematic musicology.
- 网站
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https://sites.google.com/view/sysmus/home
SysMus的外部链接
- 所属行业
- 高等教育
- 规模
- 2-10 人
- 类型
- 非营利机构
- 创立
- 2008
动态
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Tomorrow is finally the day we all have been waiting for, and we can't wait to get SysMus '24 started! Abstract Booklet has now been published, you can find it from our website https://lnkd.in/gDEZetMX. See you tomorrow! ??
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Only few more days to go until the conference! You can find the programme for the conference from our website: https://lnkd.in/gDEZetMX If you have any questions regarding the programme, please contact us at [email protected]. See you soon! ??
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Here you can download slide template for your presentation. Please note that if you are giving in-person spoken presentation, you should email your presentation to us at [email protected] by the 6th of June. See you soon! ?? https://lnkd.in/dntw7KVu
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?? Registrations for SysMus '24 closes today! ?? If you have any problems with the registration, please contact us at [email protected].
? Registrations for SysMus '24 are now open! If you are presenting, please upload your final abstracts with the list of authors and references to be published in the abstract booklet. If you would like to add any information that has not been covered by any of the other questions, please write it in the 'Notes to the organizers' block. If you have any problems with the registration, please don't hesitate to contact us at [email protected]. https://lnkd.in/d5KDKkkf
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?? We are extremely happy to announce our final keynote speaker: Professor Isabelle Peretz! Dr. Peretz is a professor of Psychology at the University of Montreal and the co-holder of a Casavant Research chair in neurocognition of music. She has published over 470 scientific papers on a variety of topics in neurocognition of music, from perception, memory, and emotions to singing and dancing. Her research focuses on the musical potential of ordinary people, its neural correlates, its heritability and its specificity relative to language. She is renowned for her work on congenital and acquired musical disorders (amusia) and on the biological foundations of music processing in general. She has shown that musicality can be distinguished from language by mobilizing a specialized brain network, under the likely influence of innate mechanisms. As a result, every individual is born musical. This neurobiological approach to music is based on a thorough and experimental study of cases that have selectively lost musical skills as a result of a stroke or of a congenital anomaly. The approach she uses pertains to cognitive neuropsychology and exploits a variety of techniques, including psychophysics, electroencephalography and magneto-encephalography, anatomical and functional neuroimaging by magnetic resonance, transcranial magnetic stimulation and genetics. Dr. Peretz has been awarded several prizes: The Justine & Yves Sergent award, the ACFAS Jacques Rousseau award, the Adrien Pinard award, the Neuronal Plasticity prize of the IPSEN Foundation, the prize of Excellence of FRQNT, the Women of distinction YMCA award, the Armand-Frappier Prize and more recently, the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Society for Music Perception and Cognition. ? We are extremely excited and honoured to have Dr. Peretz as our last keynote speaker!
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?? We are extremely happy to announce our second keynote speaker: Professor Tuomas Eerola! Tuomas Eerola is a Professor in Music Cognition at Durham University. His research combines empirical music research, music psychology, and music and science. The topics of interest are music and emotions, and how we perceive music, especially the central elements such as melody, timbre, rhythm, metre, and dissonance. He approaches these topics with empirical experiments and often uses computational models to articulate the theories. He champions open science in his work. Professor Eerola has led several major research projects, Sweet Sorrow funded by the Academy of Finland (2013-2017). He has been the co-investigator in Interpersonal Entrainment in Music Performance, funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC, 2016-18), led by Martin Clayton and the other co-investigators being Antonio Camurri (Genoa) and Peter Keller (Sydney). He has also been involved in two funded research projects (EnTimeMent, funded by EU FET programme led by Antonio Camurri, and Social cohesion and resilience through intercultural music engagement, which is funded by Australian Research Council and led by Jane Davidson and Bill Thompson).? ? At Music Department at Durham University, he has served as the Director of Research (2013-2015, 2021-) and the Head of Department (2018-2020). He has also been the President of Finnish Musicological Society and serves on several editorial boards including the journals Psychology of Music and Music Perception.
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