FYI,
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CIM10 Nature versus Culture, 21st - 24th July 2010, University of  
Sheffield, UK

CALL FOR PAPERS

The Conferences on Interdisciplinary Musicology promote collaborations  
between sciences and humanities, between theory and practice, as well  
as interdisciplinary combinations that are new, unusual, creative, or  
otherwise especially promising. CIM10 will focus on the relationship  
between nature and culture in musical behaviour, thinking and sound.

With the influence of evolutionary theory, and the interpenetration of  
the approaches and methods of the sciences and arts, researchers from  
many different fields have become interested in how culture and  
biology shape musical phenomena. To what extent is the music that gets  
made (its materials and structure) a direct product of physical and  
biological properties? How is the experience of music governed by  
biological mechanisms and cultural processes?

The conference aims to bring together representatives of the arts and  
humanities, the sciences, and musical practice who are involved in  
research on culture and nature in music. Researchers from all relevant  
disciplines are invited to contribute theoretical, empirical and  
computational studies.

The following topic areas illustrate the scope of the conference theme:

• Music’s evolutionary origins

• Cross-cultural comparison of musical phenomena

• Linguistic influences on music cognition

• How culture and biology shape the phenomenal experience of musical  
expectation

• Biological and cultural influences on the experience of emotions  
with music

• Relationship between emotional experience with music and emotions in  
daily life

• Development of musical skills

• Musical universals and musical specializations

• Cognitive and physical constraints shaping musical materials and  
compositional practices



Submissions are encouraged that are related to these sub-areas or the  
general theme of nature versus culture.

Submission details:

In keeping with the aim of CIM to promote interaction between  
disciplines, each submission must have at least two authors who  
represent different disciplines. Extended abstracts should be  
structured in the following seven headlines:

1. Background in the first discipline

2. Background in the second discipline

3. Aims

4. Main Contribution

5. Implications for musical practice

6. Implications for musicological interdisciplinarity

7. References

In empirical and computational contributions, the “main contribution”  
should include a summary of method and results. Each submitted  
abstract should be followed by a short biography (CV) of the (first)  
two authors. The whole file should not exceed 1000 words, including  
all headings, names of authors, their affiliations, email addresses  
and biographies. The preferred format of the presentation (talk or  
poster) should also be indicated. All submissions must address the  
conference theme. Abstracts should be submitted in English either as  
plain text or in an attached document (MS Word). They will be reviewed  
anonymously by a panel of international experts.

Deadline: 15th of September 2009

E-mail submissions to: [email protected]

Further information from: http://www.sheffield.ac.uk/cim10/index.html

CIM10 is directed by:

Dr Nicola Dibben, and Dr Renee Timmers, Department of Music,  
University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK

CIM10 is presented in collaboration with the European Society for  
Cognitive Sciences of Music (ESCOM), and the Society for Education,  
Psychology and Music Research (SEMPRE).



See: www.sheffield.ac.uk/cim10/


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