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Palese, Richard S.; Duke, Robert A. – Update: Applications of Research in Music Education, 2022
We asked school- and college-aged instrumentalists (N = 32) to imagine an ideal performance of a brief passage of music, record a performance of the passage, and describe discrepancies they noticed between their imagined and actual performances. The more experienced participants took at least as much time to imagine their idealized performances as…
Descriptors: Musical Instruments, Music Education, Music Activities, Performance
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Hamilton, Lani M.; Duke, Robert A. – Journal of Research in Music Education, 2020
In two experiments we examined the extent to which musicians identify discrepancies between their intentions and their playing during individual practice. In the first experiment, 60 musicians representing four levels of skill development practiced a familiar piece from their own repertoire for 5 min while being audio recorded. They then listened…
Descriptors: Musicians, Intention, Skill Development, Drills (Practice)
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Allen, Sarah E.; Duke, Robert A. – Update: Applications of Research in Music Education, 2013
During evening practice sessions, 32 nonpianist musicians learned a short melody on piano, and then either learned a second short piano melody, learned a difficult unfamiliar piece on their principal instruments, practiced familiar material on their principal instruments, or engaged in no other music-related motor behavior prior to sleep; practice…
Descriptors: Music, Music Education, Musical Instruments, Musicians
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Duke, Robert A.; Cash, Carla Davis; Allen, Sarah E. – Journal of Research in Music Education, 2011
To test the extent to which learners performing a simple keyboard passage would be affected by directing their focus of attention to different aspects of their movements, 16 music majors performed a brief keyboard passage under each of four focus conditions arranged in a counterbalanced design--a total of 64 experimental sessions. As they…
Descriptors: Music Education, Music, Musical Instruments, Psychomotor Skills