16 Oct 2008 10:10 - 10:50am Special events Helmholtz and the physiological theory of music Jacques Bouveresse The origins of human dialogue : Word and music 16 Oct 2008 10:10 - 10:50am Share Facebook LinkedIn Bluesky Threads Copy url Audio-visual RSS
Thursday 16 October 2008 Amphithéâtre Marguerite de Navarre, Site Marcelin Berthelot Open to all 10:10 - 10:50 Skip youtube video player Listen to audio Speaker(s) Jacques Bouveresse Professor at the Collège de France Events Previous Special events 16 Oct 2008 9:00 - 9:30am Stanislas Dehaene et Pierre Corvol Introduction Special events 16 Oct 2008 9:30 - 10:10am Christine Petit Hearing : the physiological basis of hearing Special events 16 Oct 2008 10:10 - 10:50am Jacques Bouveresse Helmholtz and the physiological theory of music Special events 16 Oct 2008 11:10 - 11:50am Wolfgang Enard Mice, chimpanzees and the molecular basis of language Special events 16 Oct 2008 11:50am - 12:30pm Pierre-Yves Oudeyer Self-organization in the evolution of speech Special events 16 Oct 2008 2:00 - 2:40pm Luigi Rizzi How can we formalize the diversity of languages ? Special events 16 Oct 2008 2:40 - 3:20pm Simha Arom Between speech and music : the drumming languages of Central Africa Special events 16 Oct 2008 3:20 - 4:00pm Roger Chartier Capturing live speech : notating the music of speech Special events 16 Oct 2008 4:20 - 5:00pm Michael Edwards Poetry and music : audible thought Special events 16 Oct 2008 5:00 - 5:40pm Xavier Rodet Synthesis of the spoken and sung voice Special events 17 Oct 2008 9:00 - 9:40am Martine Hausberger Learning to sing in birds : the importance of social influences Special events 17 Oct 2008 9:40 - 10:20am Ghislaine Dehaene-Lambertz How do children learn their mother tongue ? Special events 17 Oct 2008 10:20 - 11:00am Helen Neville Variability in brain plasticity: how can musical training improve cognition? Special events 17 Oct 2008 11:20am - 12:00pm Isabelle Peretz The failure of the dialogue between speech and music in song Special events 17 Oct 2008 12:00 - 12:40pm Monica Zilbovicius Reasons for autism Special events 17 Oct 2008 2:00 - 2:40pm Christian Lorenzi Speech and noise : the organization of listening comprehension Special events 17 Oct 2008 2:40 - 3:20pm Claude Hagège Parole-chant : Opera Special events 17 Oct 2008 3:20 - 4:00pm Jean-Claude Risset Music and speech, from acoustic to digital Special events 17 Oct 2008 4:20 - 5:00pm Peter Szendy " Word, Word, Word " Special events 17 Oct 2008 5:00 - 5:40pm Emmanuel Bigand Emotion in musical language Next See also Opening symposia The origins of human dialogue : Word and music
Special events 16 Oct 2008 9:30 - 10:10am Christine Petit Hearing : the physiological basis of hearing
Special events 16 Oct 2008 10:10 - 10:50am Jacques Bouveresse Helmholtz and the physiological theory of music
Special events 16 Oct 2008 11:10 - 11:50am Wolfgang Enard Mice, chimpanzees and the molecular basis of language
Special events 16 Oct 2008 11:50am - 12:30pm Pierre-Yves Oudeyer Self-organization in the evolution of speech
Special events 16 Oct 2008 2:00 - 2:40pm Luigi Rizzi How can we formalize the diversity of languages ?
Special events 16 Oct 2008 2:40 - 3:20pm Simha Arom Between speech and music : the drumming languages of Central Africa
Special events 16 Oct 2008 3:20 - 4:00pm Roger Chartier Capturing live speech : notating the music of speech
Special events 17 Oct 2008 9:00 - 9:40am Martine Hausberger Learning to sing in birds : the importance of social influences
Special events 17 Oct 2008 9:40 - 10:20am Ghislaine Dehaene-Lambertz How do children learn their mother tongue ?
Special events 17 Oct 2008 10:20 - 11:00am Helen Neville Variability in brain plasticity: how can musical training improve cognition?
Special events 17 Oct 2008 11:20am - 12:00pm Isabelle Peretz The failure of the dialogue between speech and music in song
Special events 17 Oct 2008 2:00 - 2:40pm Christian Lorenzi Speech and noise : the organization of listening comprehension
Special events 17 Oct 2008 3:20 - 4:00pm Jean-Claude Risset Music and speech, from acoustic to digital