http://cogpsy.skku.ac.kr/cwb-bin/CrazyWWWBoard.exe?mode=read&num=3526&page=15&db=article&backdepth=2
-오하외오대 심리학자 연구 -
http://www.osu.edu/researchnews/archive/musicmm2.htm
MEMORY FOR MUSIC: MUSICIANS DON’T HAVE TO HEAR THEMSELVES PERFORM AFTER THEY LEARN A SONG
COLUMBUS, Ohio -- Musicians who hear the music they are performing while learning a new piece have a better memory for the music later, a new study suggests.
But after they learn a song, actually hearing the music as they play does not improve the accuracy of their performance.
Caroline Palmer
These results shed new light on how memory works and on theories about how people learn, said Caroline Palmer, co-author of the study and professor of psychology at Ohio State University.
Specifically, Palmer said the findings cast doubt on the universality of matching theories – theories that state memory works best when conditions are similar during learning and during recall of the information.
In this research, matching theory would suggest