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Dive into the research topics where Robert Harris is active.

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Featured researches published by Robert Harris.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Cerebral activations related to audition-driven performance imagery in professional musicians

Robert Harris; Bauke M. de Jong

Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) was used to study the activation of cerebral motor networks during auditory perception of music in professional keyboard musicians (n = 12). The activation paradigm implied that subjects listened to two-part polyphonic music, while either critically appraising the performance or imagining they were performing themselves. Two-part polyphonic audition and bimanual motor imagery circumvented a hemisphere bias associated with the convention of playing the melody with the right hand. Both tasks activated ventral premotor and auditory cortices, bilaterally, and the right anterior parietal cortex, when contrasted to 12 musically unskilled controls. Although left ventral premotor activation was increased during imagery (compared to judgment), bilateral dorsal premotor and right posterior-superior parietal activations were quite unique to motor imagery. The latter suggests that musicians not only recruited their manual motor repertoire but also performed a spatial transformation from the vertically perceived pitch axis (high and low sound) to the horizontal axis of the keyboard. Imagery-specific activations in controls were seen in left dorsal parietal-premotor and supplementary motor cortices. Although these activations were less strong compared to musicians, this overlapping distribution indicated the recruitment of a general ‘mirror-neuron’ circuitry. These two levels of sensori-motor transformations point towards common principles by which the brain organizes audition-driven music performance and visually guided task performance.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Behavioral Quantification of Audiomotor Transformations in Improvising and Score-Dependent Musicians

Robert Harris; Peter van Kranenburg; Bauke M. de Jong

The historically developed practice of learning to play a music instrument from notes instead of by imitation or improvisation makes it possible to contrast two types of skilled musicians characterized not only by dissimilar performance practices, but also disparate methods of audiomotor learning. In a recent fMRI study comparing these two groups of musicians while they either imagined playing along with a recording or covertly assessed the quality of the performance, we observed activation of a right-hemisphere network of posterior superior parietal and dorsal premotor cortices in improvising musicians, indicating more efficient audiomotor transformation. In the present study, we investigated the detailed performance characteristics underlying the ability of both groups of musicians to replicate music on the basis of aural perception alone. Twenty-two classically-trained improvising and score-dependent musicians listened to short, unfamiliar two-part excerpts presented with headphones. They played along or replicated the excerpts by ear on a digital piano, either with or without aural feedback. In addition, they were asked to harmonize or transpose some of the excerpts either to a different key or to the relative minor. MIDI recordings of their performances were compared with recordings of the aural model. Concordance was expressed in an audiomotor alignment score computed with the help of music information retrieval algorithms. Significantly higher alignment scores were found when contrasting groups, voices, and tasks. The present study demonstrates the superior ability of improvising musicians to replicate both the pitch and rhythm of aurally perceived music at the keyboard, not only in the original key, but also in other tonalities. Taken together with the enhanced activation of the right dorsal frontoparietal network found in our previous fMRI study, these results underscore the conclusion that the practice of improvising music can be associated with enhanced audiomotor transformation in response to aurally perceived music.


Brain Research | 2015

Differential parietal and temporal contributions to music perception in improvising and score-dependent musicians, an fMRI study.

Robert Harris; Bauke M. de Jong


Brain and Language | 2016

Speech dysprosody but no music 'dysprosody' in Parkinson's disease

Robert Harris; Klaus L. Leenders; Bauke M. de Jong


Piano bulletin | 2018

Spelen als Brugman

Robert Harris


The Neurosciences and Music VI: Music, Sound, and Health | 2017

Audiomotor transformations in improvising and score-dependent musicians

Robert Harris; Bauke M. de Jong


Archive | 2017

The cerebral organization of audiomotor transformations in music

Robert Harris


EPTA Nationaal Congres | 2017

De onbewuste pianist

Robert Harris


Dagblad van het Noorden | 2017

Iedereen is muzikaal

Robert Harris


Archive | 2014

Cerebral activations in highly-skilled keyboard performers

Robert Harris; Bauke M. de Jong

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Bauke M. de Jong

University Medical Center Groningen

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Klaus L. Leenders

University Medical Center Groningen

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