Anyone that's
studied voice training or taken singing lessons will feel right at home.
Not exact matches
Helga Rietz wrote an engaging story on efforts by Matthias Echternach — who is both a
trained singer and a medical doctor — to
study the physiology of the singing
voice.
New
studies of what these infants hear and don't hear during their weeks in the hospital suggests that some may be missing out on the positive impact of a mother's
voice and heartbeat, and are instead
training their brains to prioritize background noise over human
voices, said Amir Lahav, an assistant professor of pediatrics at Harvard Medical School.
«They've made the first comparative
study using nonhuman primates of the cerebral processing of
voices, and they've done it with a noninvasive technique by
training dogs to lie in a scanner.»
«Memory
training needs to target specific difficulties to be effective, suggests
study: A recently published Baycrest
study suggests that
training programs can help, but only if they are tailored towards an individual's specific memory difficulty, such as trouble remembering faces,
voices or recent events.»
A chorus of
voices from the Institute for the
Study of Knowledge Management in Education (ISKME), a foundation that offers workshops, support and
training for OER.
She
studied classical
voice for eighteen years and
trained in the Meisner acting technique.
She continued her
training at Bard College where she
studied voice and composition.
With an incredibly versatile range and repertoire, Brooklyn Youth Chorus combines intensive
voice training and music
study with exceptional performance experiences.