Editorial
Music in Science and Medicine
Dorita S. Berger*
PhD, Durham, NC, USA
- Corresponding Author:
- Dorita S. Berger
Therapist, The Music Therapy Clinic
Norwalk, USA
Tel: +44 (020)78332307
E-mail: dsberger@mags.net
Received Date: April 10, 2015; Accepted Date: April 13, 2015; Published Date: April 15, 2015
Citation: Berger DS (2015) Music in Science and Medicine. J Biomusic Eng 3:e106. doi:10.4172/2090-2719.1000e106
Copyright: © 2015 Berger DS. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Abstract
Music, by any definition, has been part of human life since the beginning of bipedalism, and maybe even before that. Now, in our 21st Century, there is not a day that goes by without music and without the myriad of technologies to help even an infant be exposed to this aesthetic form of communication. Music is energy, emotion, vibration, infiltrating our sensory systems, emotions, and whole bodies. And, with the development of current technologies, music has a far reaching effect for composers developing unimaginable sounds and expressions and listener seeking the best devices for enjoying music.