Music is a powerful means of communication. It provides a means by which people can share emotions, intentions, and meanings even though their spoken languages may be mutually incomprehensible. It can also provide a vital lifeline to human interaction for those whose special needs make other means of communication difficult. Music can exert powerful physical effects, can produce deep and profound emotions within us, and can be used to generate infinitely subtle variations of expressiveness by skilled composers and performers. This new addition to the music psychology list brings together leading researchers from a variety of academic and applied backgrounds. It examines how music can be used to communicate and the biological, cognitive, social, and cultural processes which underlie such communication. Taking a broad, interdisciplinary look at all aspects of communication, from the symbolic aspects of musical notation, to the use of music in advertising, the book is the first of its kind. It will be valuable for all those involved in music cognition, music education, and communication studies.
1. How do people communicate using music?,David J Hargreaves, Raymond MacDonald & Dorothy Miell 2. Music and meaning, ambiguity and evolution,Ian Cross 3. Music and conversation,R Keith Sawyer Cognition, Representation and Communication 4. Musical communication and music cognition: liberties and limitations,Annabel J Cohen 5. From mimesis to catharsis: expression, perception and induction of emotion in music,Patrik N Juslin 6. Representation, cognition and musical communication: invented notation in children's musical communication,Margaret Barrett 7. How the conventions of music notation shape musical perception and performance,Jeanne Bamberger Embodied Communication 8. Rhythm, human temporality and brain function,Michael H Thaut 9. l¦