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This book provides a comprehensive overview of how fractal
analytics can lead to the extraction of interesting features from
the complex electroencephalograph (EEG) signals generated by
Hindustani classical music. It particularly focuses on how the
brain responses to the emotional attributes of Hindustani classical
music that have been long been a source of discussion for
musicologists and psychologists. Using robust scientific techniques
that are capable of looking into the most intricate dynamics of the
complex EEG signals, it deciphers the human brain's response to
different ragas of Hindustani classical music, shedding new light
on what happens inside the performer's brain when they are mentally
composing the imagery of a particular raga. It also explores the
much- debated issue in the musical fraternity of whether there are
any universal cues in music that make it identifiable for people
throughout the world, and if so, what are the neural correlates
associated with the universal cues? This book is of interest to
researchers and scholars of music and the brain, nonlinear science,
music cognition, music signal processing and music information
retrieval. In addition, researchers in the field of nonlinear
biomedical signal processing and music signal analysis benefit from
this book.
This book provides a comprehensive overview of how fractal
analytics can lead to the extraction of interesting features from
the complex electroencephalograph (EEG) signals generated by
Hindustani classical music. It particularly focuses on how the
brain responses to the emotional attributes of Hindustani classical
music that have been long been a source of discussion for
musicologists and psychologists. Using robust scientific techniques
that are capable of looking into the most intricate dynamics of the
complex EEG signals, it deciphers the human brain's response to
different ragas of Hindustani classical music, shedding new light
on what happens inside the performer's brain when they are mentally
composing the imagery of a particular raga. It also explores the
much- debated issue in the musical fraternity of whether there are
any universal cues in music that make it identifiable for people
throughout the world, and if so, what are the neural correlates
associated with the universal cues? This book is of interest to
researchers and scholars of music and the brain, nonlinear science,
music cognition, music signal processing and music information
retrieval. In addition, researchers in the field of nonlinear
biomedical signal processing and music signal analysis benefit from
this book.
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