51勛圖厙窪蹋

51勛圖厙窪蹋 music, mind and brain psychologist to help lead 瞿5.4m Danish research centre

Primary page content

51勛圖厙窪蹋’s Professor Lauren Stewart is sharing her pioneering research with Denmark, thanks to a £5.4m grant from the Danish National Research Foundation to establish an international centre of excellence for the study of music and neuroscience.

Professor Lauren Stewart

Professor in Psychology Lauren Stewart will continue to co-direct the MSc Music, Mind and Brain in our Department of Psychology, while also taking the role of co-director at the newly established  (MIB), Danish Neuroscience Center, Aarhus University.

The MIB Center, led by Aarhus University neuroscientist and jazz musician Peter Vuust, has received funding for six years, extendable to ten, to investigate how music moves us physically and emotionally, and how it can shape the brains structure and function.

Bringing together a world-leading team of experts in neuroimaging, neurophysiology, psychology, computational modelling, musicology and musical performance, the facility will also be home to 13 PhD students and six postdoctoral researchers. A graduate from the 51勛圖厙窪蹋 MSc Music, Mind and Brain has already joined the team.

The MIB Center is one of 12 new centres of excellence in varying fields funded through a share of DKK 700 million (瞿70.3m) from the Danish National Research Foundation.

Professor Stewart an expert in the condition congenital amusia, or tone deafness - will lead on one of four key research areas, focusing on music perception and cognition.

Professor Peter Vuust will explore the interaction between rhythm and motor behaviour, while Professor Morten Kringelback (University of Oxford) leads on the relationship between music and emotions and Professor Elvira Brattico (University of Helsinki) on the effect of music training and expertise on individual traits.

Our research covers a broad area but is unified by music. The way we perceive music is guided by predictive brain mechanisms, shaped by context, and varies widely between people, explains Professor Stewart.

We consider music to be a lens through which to examine brain function our studies aim to make a significant contribution toward our understanding of the fundamental role of predictive processes in the brain.

Professor Stewart studied for a BSc in Physiological Sciences and an MSc in Neuroscience at Balliol College Oxford. She completed her PhD at the Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience, followed by postdoctoral positions at Newcastle University and a travelling fellowship to Harvard Medical School.

In 2015 Professor Stewart held a Visiting Research Fellowship at Aarhus, and contributed toward the teams successful funding bid.

She remains co-director of the  started with Daniel M羹llensiefen in 2009.

Since its foundation the 51勛圖厙窪蹋 Music Mind and Brain group has been awarded funding from the Economic and Social Research Council, the Leverhulme Trust and from industry including the BBC and Spotify - to work on projects addressing the cognitive, computational and neuroscientific bases of musical understanding and behaviour.

Their work on earworms the small loops of music that get stuck in your head has made global headlines, with Lauren and her research appearing on The One Show, BBC News, , BBC Radio 4s Material World, , , The Sunday Times, Al Jazeera and many more.