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image, MIND LOBES WHILE PLAYING PIANO - Coggle Diagram
Frontal lobe
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The Frontal Lobe, through the motor cortex, plans and executes voluntary movements.
Controls finger precision, strength, and timing required for complex passages.
Coordinates both hands, enabling independent but synchronized movement.
Works with the cerebellum to refine dynamics, articulation, and speed.
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Responsible for higher-level functions such as planning, concentration, and self-regulation.
While playing piano, it helps anticipate upcoming notes, maintain tempo, and interpret musical phrasing.
Essential for sight-reading, decision-making, and staying focused during performance.
Supports expressive control, emotional regulation, and performance readiness.
Parietal Lobe
Handles spatial awareness and proprioception, allowing you to know finger locations without looking.
Integrates touch sensations from the keys, letting you adjust pressure, articulation, and accuracy.
Helps with hand placement, large leaps, and smooth movement across the keyboard.
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Temporal Lobe
The Temporal Lobe, especially the auditory cortex, processes all sound-related input.
Recognizes pitch, harmony, rhythm, tone color, and melodic patterns.
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Strengthens musical memory, helping with learning pieces and recalling melodies.
Occipital Lobe
The Occipital Lobe processes visual information, especially crucial for sight-reading.
seeing notes, rhythms, dynamic markings, and hand-position cues from sheet music.
Works with the parietal and frontal lobes to translate what you see into motor actions on the keyboard.
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