2018
DOI: 10.1016/j.neulet.2018.06.030
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The influence of moving with music on motor cortical activity

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Cited by 9 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…For those comparisons, significant differences occurred in electrodes FC3 (140 BPM), Cz (140 BPM), C4 (70 BPM),and T7 (70 BPM). Previous research has suggested that music style may impact sensorimotor activity (Janata et al., 2012 ; Witek et al., 2014 ; Stegemöller et al., 2018b ; Izbicki & Stegemöller, 2020 ). Faster tempo, moderate syncopation, and repetitive rhythm elicit a greater urge to move while slower tempo, excessive syncopation, and non‐repetitive rhythm elicit little to no urge to move (Janata et al., 2012 ; Witek et al., 2014 ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…For those comparisons, significant differences occurred in electrodes FC3 (140 BPM), Cz (140 BPM), C4 (70 BPM),and T7 (70 BPM). Previous research has suggested that music style may impact sensorimotor activity (Janata et al., 2012 ; Witek et al., 2014 ; Stegemöller et al., 2018b ; Izbicki & Stegemöller, 2020 ). Faster tempo, moderate syncopation, and repetitive rhythm elicit a greater urge to move while slower tempo, excessive syncopation, and non‐repetitive rhythm elicit little to no urge to move (Janata et al., 2012 ; Witek et al., 2014 ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Two movement rates, one low rate (70 beats per minute [BPM]) and one high rate (140 BPM), were used in this study, as both rates fall within the typical bookends of tempo markings used in music (adagio to allegro), and represent rates at which sensorimotor activity should differ (Stegemöller et al., 2016 ; Toma et al., 2002 ). Indeed, our previous work revealed that power spectra when moving with music was increased in the beta band for low movement rates and increased in the alpha band for high movement rates (Stegemoller et al., 2018b ). Temporal changes in cortical oscillations when moving to music at high and low rates, to our knowledge, has not been studied.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…The music was specifically composed for previous studies in order to control for previous experience or familiarization with the music (Izbicki & Stegemöller, 2020;Stegemöller et al, 2018Stegemöller et al, , 2021. These studies have shown that the preference for this piece (based on a 10-point Likert scale, 1 = not preferred, 5 = neutral, 10 = preferred) was 5.05 + 2.10 (Stegemöller et al, 2018) and 5.95 + 1.32 (Izbicki & Stegemöller, 2020), suggesting a neutral preference for this music condition. No participants from the previous studies were involved in this study.…”
Section: Musicmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The piece contained greater tonal and rhythmic variations than Music Condition I. These are the same pieces that were used in a previous EEG study (see Supplementary Material) (Stegemöller et al, 2018b). Participants were asked their preference for the two forms of music based on a Likert scale of 1-10.…”
Section: Musicmentioning
confidence: 99%