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  1. 14. Nov. 2015 · The campaign modified a portrait by Barbara Kraft, painted 28 years after the death of Mozart: Kraft based this painting on contemporary paintings of Mozart provided by Mozart's sister, including these (note that the painting on the left really is a different painting from Mozart's lifetime):

  2. 6. Feb. 2015 · In Mozart's time, his reputation was based first on his skill in improvisation, second on his skill as a performing pianist, and only third on his compositions. Improvisation is still an important skill for classical musicians, especially organists and those involved in early music.

  3. 3. Mai 2018 · They compared the previously mentioned Mozart piece, a 'sadder' piece (Albinoni’s Adagio in G Minor), and no music. The paper had the following results: Participants performed better on a test of spatial abilities after listening to a Mozart sonata than after sitting in silence. When a slow, “sad” musical excerpt by Albinoni was presented ...

  4. 3. Apr. 2011 · Groups performed similarly on the control test and the experimental test, irrespective of whether they listened to Mozart or to popular dance music. Since the two different designs produced similar findings, the data suggest that the Mozart effect is so ephemeral that it is questionable as to whether any practical application will come from it ...

  5. 12. Juli 2014 · This is known as "The Mozart Effect," and its effects are only temporary... CBC Radio interviewed Dr. Rauscher on 2010-Jul-01 on their show "As it happens," where she talked about her study (which elicited emotional responses, including a few death threats) and also explained how the effects were only temporary for specific spatial tasks.

  6. 10. Juli 2014 · The most famous study is talking about so called "The Mozart effect".. In 1993 Rauscher et al. made the surprising claim that, after listening to Mozart's sonata for two pianos (K448) for 10 minutes, normal subjects showed significantly better spatial reasoning skills than after periods of listening to relaxation instructions designed to lower blood pressure or silence.

  7. Japanese author and doctor of alternative medicine, Masaru Emoto claims that water can react to intentions. Talk nice to water and you get nice looking ice crystals from it. Mention Adolf Hitler near

  8. According to a very old study plants that “listen” to music have a better growth than other plants. For her next experiment, Mrs. Retallack used two chambers (and fresh plants).

  9. it isn't. But having to abbreviate 'population' did make it look so. Anyway, just to reiterate the point: when taking a specific subset of a population, there is absolutely no particular reason that it should follow the same distribution as the parent population.

  10. That 119 participant one is a pretty clunky experiment. It's like taking people who say they have never received piano lessons, guiding them once through the keys of a Mozart piece and then concluding that if it sounded bad then pianos cannot be used to play nice sounding Mozart music. If EFT has substance then it's plausible that it's ...

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