References
The End of Alzheimer’s Program – Dale E. Bredesen, M.D. References
Following is a list of references from the book, The End of Alzheimer’s Program, published by Avery/Random House. Due to the length of the text, these references could not be included in the print version, and therefore are listed below.
28 – Lori F. Gooding et al., American Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease & Other Dementias 29, no. 4, 333–43, June 2014
Musical Training and Late-Life Cognition
29 – Travi White-Schwoch et al., Journal of Neuroscience 33, no. 45, 17667–74, November 2013
Older Adults Benefit from Music Training Early in Life: Biological Evidence for Long-Term Training-Driven Plasticity
30 – Christopher J. Steele et al., Journal of Neuroscience 33, no. 3, 1282–90, January 2013
Early Musical Training and White-Matter Plasticity in the Corpus Callosum: Evidence for a Sensitive Period
31 – M. Alison Balbag, Nancy L. Pedersen, and Margaret Gatz, International Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease 2014, 836748, December 2014
Playing a Musical Instrument as a Protective Factor Against Dementia and Cognitive Impairment: A Population-Based Twin Study
32 – Jennifer A. Bugos, Music Education Research International 4, 1–9, 2010
The Benefits of Music Instruction on Processing Speed, Verbal Fluency, and Cognitive Control in Aging
33 – Helen Brooker et al., International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry 34, no. 7, 932–40, July 2019
The Relationship Between the Frequency of Number-Puzzle Use and Baseline Cognitive Function in a Large Online Sample of Adults Aged 50 and Over
34 – Stacy W. Kish, Health, University of Utah, April 27, 2018
Music Activates Regions of the Brain Spared by Alzheimer’s Disease
35 – Petr Janata, Cerebral Cortex 19, no. 11, 2579–94, March 2009
The Neural Architecture of Music-Evoked Autobiographical Memories
35 – Vinoo Alluri et al., NeuroImage 59, no. 4, 3677–89, February 2012
Large-Scale Brain Networks Emerge from Dynamic Processing of Musical Timbre, Key and Rhythm
36 – Chakravarthi Kanduri et al., PeerJ 3, e830, March 2015