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Music making across cultures arguably involves a blend of innovation and adherence to established norms. This integration allows listeners to recognise a range of innovative, surprising, and functional elements in music, while also associating them to a certain tradition or style. In this light, musical may be seen to involve the novel recombination of shared elements and rules, which can in itself give rise to new cultural conventions. Put simply, future rely on past and present ; this holds for music as it does for other cultural domains. A key process permeating this temporal transition, with regards to both music making and music listening, is . Recent findings suggest that as we listen to music, our brain is constantly generating predictions based on prior knowledge acquired in a given enculturation context. Those predictions, in turn, can shape our appraisal of the music, in a continual perception-action loop. This dynamic process of predicting and calibrating expectations may enable shared musical realities, that is, sets of norms that are transmitted, with some modification, either vertically between generations of a given musical culture, or horizontally between peers of the same or different cultures. As music transforms through , so do the predictive models in our minds and the expectancy they give rise to, influenced by cultural exposure and individual experience. Thus, creativity and prediction are both fundamental and complementary to the transmission of cultural systems, including music, across generations and societies. For these reasons, were the central themes in a symposium we organised in 2022. The symposium aimed to study their interplay from an interdisciplinary perspective, guided by contemporary theories and methodologies. This special issue compiles research discussed during or inspired by that symposium, concluding with potential directions for the field of music cognition in that spirit.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.5334/joc.399 | DOI Listing |
Commun Biol
September 2025
Wesleyan University, Middletown, CT, USA.
J Aging Stud
September 2025
Department of Literature and Art, Maastricht University, the Netherlands.
This article offers an anocritical reading of Girls5eva, a sitcom about a 1990s one-hit girl group trying to make a comeback. Building on scholarship into the representation of aging women in popular media and the music industry, our reading first addresses fuzzy boundaries between life stages and transgressions of the normalized life course. Second, we examine the discourse of girl power and its relationship to midlife transformation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Geriatr Psychiatry
September 2025
REACH: The Centre for Research in Ageing and Cognitive Health, University of Exeter Medical School, Exeter, UK.
Objectives: Awareness of difficulties varies in people with dementia. Low awareness, also termed anosognosia, has been implicated in carer stress and safety concerns, and can be a barrier to effective clinical communication. Little is known about how to manage situations arising from low awareness.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBJPsych Open
September 2025
Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Namdarun Rehabilitation Clinic, Yongin City, South Korea.
Background: Depression is one of the most common mental diseases, leading to a decline in both psychiatric and physical functions. One non-pharmacological therapeutic strategy for the management of psychiatric disorders is music therapy.
Aims: To assess the clinical effectiveness of music therapy and its various subscales for managing depressive symptoms (primary outcome) and related problems (secondary outcome) in comparison with other conventional treatments.
Twin Res Hum Genet
September 2025
Department of Psychology, California State University, Fullerton, CA, USA.
Twin highlights from the 2025 summer meeting of the International Society for Human Ethology are reviewed. The value of observing twins in naturalistic and semi-naturalistic settings is revealed. Research reports involving twins with Feingold syndrome, twins with language delays, breastfeeding of twins, and twins with Olmsted syndrome are reviewed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF