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  1. Music, the arts, and ideas.Leonard B. Meyer - 1967 - Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
    The Postlude, written for this edition, looks back at the predictions made more than twenty-five years ago and speculates about what the coming decades may hold ...
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  • Music, the Arts, and Ideas: Patterns and Predictions in Twentieth-Century Culture.Leonard B. Meyer - 1994 - University of Chicago Press.
    Meyer makes a valuable statement on aesthetics, criteria for assessing great works of music, compositional practices and theories of the present day, and predictions of the future of Western culture. His postlude, written for the book's twenty-fifth anniversary, looks back at his thoughts on the direction of music in 1967.
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  • Continuous processing in word recognition at 24 months.Daniel Swingley, John P. Pinto & Anne Fernald - 1999 - Cognition 71 (2):73-108.
  • Music, the Arts, and Ideas: Patterns and Predictions in Twentieth-Century Culture.Mark Debellis - 1997 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 55 (3):335-337.
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  • The time course of spoken word learning and recognition: studies with artificial lexicons.James S. Magnuson, Michael K. Tanenhaus, Richard N. Aslin & Delphine Dahan - 2003 - Journal of Experimental Psychology: General 132 (2):202.
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  • Auditory attention to frequency and time: an analogy to visual local–global stimuli.Timothy Justus & Alexandra List - 2005 - Cognition 98 (1):31-51.
    Two priming experiments demonstrated exogenous attentional persistence to the fundamental auditory dimensions of frequency (Experiment 1) and time (Experiment 2). In a divided-attention task, participants responded to an independent dimension, the identification of three-tone sequence patterns, for both prime and probe stimuli. The stimuli were specifically designed to parallel the local–global hierarchical letter stimuli of [Navon D. (1977). Forest before trees: The precedence of global features in visual perception. Cognitive Psychology, 9, 353–383] and the task was designed to parallel subsequent (...)
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  • Heeding the voice of experience: The role of talker variation in lexical access.Sarah C. Creel, Richard N. Aslin & Michael K. Tanenhaus - 2008 - Cognition 106 (2):633-664.
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