The Song That Remains
Music, Art, and Artificial Intelligence in Dementia and Alzheimer's Care
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Narrado por:
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Virtual Voice
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De:
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Maria Merlino
Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
The Song That Remains: Music, Art, and Artificial Intelligence in Dementia and Alzheimer's Care
Something remarkable happens when the right song plays for someone with Alzheimer's disease. A person who cannot remember what year it is, or recognize the face of someone they have loved for decades, begins to sing. Every word. Every note. In tune.
This is not a miracle. It is neuroscience. And it is the starting point for one of the most hopeful developments in dementia care today.
In The Song That Remains, Maria Merlino brings together the latest brain science, clinical research, and emerging artificial intelligence tools to show what is possible for the fifty-five million people living with dementia worldwide and the families caring for them. Written for caregivers, clinicians, and anyone who wants to understand what is happening at the frontier of this field, the book is neither a technical manual nor a grief memoir. It is an honest, warm, and deeply practical account of why creative therapies work, how artificial intelligence is extending their reach, and what families can do right now.
Alzheimer's disease takes so much. But it does not take everything. The emotional memory, the musical memory, the felt sense of who a person is and who they love: these are the things the disease tends to take last. They are also precisely the things that music therapy, art therapy, and reminiscence work are designed to reach. The book explains why, in plain language grounded in real neuroscience, and makes the case that these are not soft alternatives to proper medical care. They are evidence-based clinical interventions that belong at the center of dementia treatment.
Artificial intelligence is entering this story at exactly the right moment. Not as a cure, and not as a replacement for human care, but as a set of tools that can make personalized creative therapy available to more people, more of the time, at lower cost. The book covers the AI music systems that learn what reaches a specific person and respond in real time, the life story platforms helping families capture and share biographical knowledge across care teams, the virtual reality tools transporting people back to the places that carry their most durable memories, and the research programs training AI to detect the earliest signs of cognitive decline through changes in language and creative expression.
It also covers what could go wrong: the consent challenges, the data ownership questions, the risk that technology will be used to justify reducing human care rather than supplementing it, and the equity problem that runs through everything.
The Song That Remains includes comprehensive practical resources for families and caregivers in both the United States and the United Kingdom, covering how to find qualified music and art therapists, how to build a personalized music playlist, how to create a life story document, what insurance and NHS funding is available, and which organizations provide the best support for families navigating dementia care.
This is a book for the daughter who cannot be there every day and needs to know her mother is still reachable. For the care worker who wants to do more than manage symptoms. For the clinician looking for the evidence behind creative approaches. And for anyone who has sat with someone they love and wondered what, if anything, is getting through.
Something is getting through. This book explains what it is and how to reach it.