WEBVTT Kind: captions; language: en-us 00:00:00.000 --> 00:00:06.100 Hello, everyone and welcome back. We are here, I'm sitting here with Hans, and you are back from your 00:00:06.100 --> 00:00:15.500 "Corona vacation". Healthy and fine. We have been looking 00:00:15.500 --> 00:00:21.600 through comments. Anything to pick up on this week, Hans. There was a question about mirror neurons. 00:00:21.600 --> 00:00:30.450 Are mirror neurons still relevant? Yes, absolutely,I would say so. 00:00:30.450 --> 00:00:37.300 You can say that now time has passed a little bit. So mirror neurons is not as controversial as 00:00:37.300 --> 00:00:42.300 they might have been at some point. Now there is a lot of research going on in trying 00:00:42.300 --> 00:00:47.200 to understand more about this mechanism, but also here in Oslo we work with 00:00:47.200 --> 00:00:52.900 this as something that we take for granted. So that's something we're working from. 00:00:52.900 --> 00:01:00.050 That's the mirror part of this. 00:01:00.050 --> 00:01:06.100 If I talk very fast... I will follow, and I will not, you will not... 00:01:06.100 --> 00:01:11.200 It's this kind of turn-taking. You can also see it 00:01:11.200 --> 00:01:16.900 with small children. You can really see that they imitate continuously. So that's 00:01:16.900 --> 00:01:21.600 really a part of how we're learning. 00:01:21.600 --> 00:01:26.900 And before you have language, that is the way you learn. And then it slows down 00:01:26.900 --> 00:01:30.550 because we know that you can't really say that much. 00:01:30.550 --> 00:01:38.600 And it is not acceptable. Except for that, we have also been looking at the 00:01:38.600 --> 00:01:45.200 various types of multimodality and these "takete", "maluma", "baluba" kind of words. 00:01:45.200 --> 00:01:51.500 Hans: why do we talk about these things in a course that's more about music? 00:01:51.500 --> 00:01:58.400 I mean, what's the connection here? It might be a long way to understand how 00:01:58.400 --> 00:02:00.550 that kind of connects the two. 00:02:00.550 --> 00:02:08.500 Maybe the easiest thing is to talk about emotions and how 00:02:08.500 --> 00:02:16.050 taketa and maluma have some kind of emotional feeling 00:02:16.050 --> 00:02:25.550 If you have, for example, a very soft soft music 00:02:25.550 --> 00:02:30.500 or that it's played kind of softly, you will also get that kind of 00:02:30.500 --> 00:02:37.000 feeling from the movement that has produced the music in that way, and you kind of adapt 00:02:38.000 --> 00:02:48.700 the way it is produced. Then you also adapt the emotion of how its produced. 00:02:48.700 --> 00:02:56.300 I think it's extremely important because in the beginning of a musical excerpt, you will, for 00:02:56.300 --> 00:03:04.100 example here very fast what kind of... if it's aggressive or if it's... and that is kind of the 00:03:04.100 --> 00:03:08.300 way it's been played. With rapid and impulsive attacks. 00:03:08.300 --> 00:03:15.600 Then we immediately interpret that. This is not something we do consciously, 00:03:15.600 --> 00:03:20.700 it just happens. It's about the energy, I guess, and what's going on in the body. 00:03:20.700 --> 00:03:25.700 But also this kind of emotional or more metaphorical even kind of associations... 00:03:25.700 --> 00:03:32.600 That's an interesting way of getting at it and we'll talk more 00:03:32.600 --> 00:03:38.600 about this also later in the course, but hopefully, that was a bit clarifying. 00:03:39.200 --> 00:03:45.900 It is problematic with music and body movement because everything is actually mixed together. 00:03:45.900 --> 00:03:53.050 We focuse on something, and then we come back to other important things later, 00:03:53.050 --> 00:03:59.100 when it comes to pulse and groove and these things. And the multimodality aspect. 00:03:59.100 --> 00:04:04.100 One thing is what you hear, the audition, and then what you see, the vision, but also the other 00:04:04.100 --> 00:04:08.300 modalities are in play, although we don't really think about it so much. But think about 00:04:08.300 --> 00:04:11.900 for example the smell of these chairs that you are sitting on here and how that contributes to the 00:04:11.900 --> 00:04:18.000 experience of being in this place. So think about that wherever you are sitting and the 00:04:18.000 --> 00:04:22.650 smell around you or the taste or music if you're playing some instrument where... 00:04:22.650 --> 00:04:27.200 Or if you're moving... 00:04:27.200 --> 00:04:36.900 Okay, so just keep on writing comments. Help each other out as well. Ask questions if you have any. 00:04:37.200 --> 00:04:41.200 See you again next week next week.