缅北强奸

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Join us at our inaugural symposium on Music and Language, with a focus this year on Development

Published: 3 April 2013

Registration is now open for the CRBLM Inaugural Symposium on Music and Language, to be held in Montr茅al, Canada on Friday, May 3rd and Saturday May 4th 2013. A brief conference program is included below.听 Full details about the conference and registration information are available at 听

About the conference:

Language and music are arguably the most significant social and neurobiological endowments of humankind. At the Centre for Research on Brain, Language and Music (CRBLM) they are the framework through which our members address questions in human development, cognition, performance, function and dysfunction. They are also fruitful areas for cross-domain comparison. Music and language share many features such as a complex sound-pattern system, temporal structures, melody and intonation as well as sequencing and syntax. Conversely, differences in the domains illustrate what is unique about each. Please join us at our inaugural symposium in which we will explore these issues with local, national and international experts, with a focus this year on development.
For full details, visit our website: 听 听听

Program

Friday, May 3rd

9:00-10:00am
Jenny Saffran
(University of Wisconsin-Madison)
Music, language, and the infant mind: Mechanisms, interactions, and open questions

10:00-10:30am
Sandra Trehub
(University of Toronto, Mississauga)
A musical path to language


10:30-11:00am
Coffee break


11:00am-12:00pm
David Poeppel
(New York University)
The temporal structure of perceptual experience

12:00-12:30pm
Linda Polka
(缅北强奸)
The imprint of native language rhythm on speech and music (?) processing

12:30-1:15pm
Lunch Break


1:15-3:00pm
Poster session


3:00-4:00pm
Aniruddh D. Patel
(Tufts University)
Auditory processing demands in speech and music: a developmental perspective

4:00-6:00pm
Roundtable on sensitive periods
Chaired by Virginia Penhune (Concordia University) with Etienne de Villers-Sidani (缅北强奸), Denise Klein (缅北强奸), Laurel Trainor (McMaster University) and Jenny Saffran (University of Wisconsin-Madison)

Saturday, May 4th

9:00am
Coffee break


9:30-10:30am
Nina Kraus
(Northwestern University)
Music, language and the brain: development and neuroeducational outcomes

10:30-11:00am
Jon Sakata
(缅北强奸)
Songbirds as model systems for human speech and musical abilities

11:00-11:30am
Break


11:30-12:00pm
Lucie M茅nard
(Universit茅 du Qu茅bec 脿 Montr茅al)
Speech development and prosody: some theoretical and experimental issues

12:00pm-1:00pm
Laurel Trainor
(McMaster University)
The development of spectral and temporal (rhythmic) processes that underlie musical and linguistic communication

Contact information: info [at] brams.umontreal.ca

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