Music Listening, Music Therapy, Phenomenology and Neuroscience

(Nancy Kaufman) #1

Appendix 3.02 Survey of The Neurosciences a


nd Music I


I


Conference 2005


From Perception to Performance


Part I. Ethology/Evolution: Do Animals have Music or Something El 


se?

5 papers

Title, Category

Aim

Mus. Material, Cultural Ref.

Technology & Procedure

Main focus of interest

Conclusion


  1. McDermott & Hauser
    (6-16)
    Origins of Music Perception
    Cat. 2: Consonance / dissonance
    Cat
    . 3: Complex sounds
    2. Merker (17


-28)

Conformal Motive in Birdsong
Cat. 6: Animal sounds


  1. Fitch (29


-49)

Music Evolution
Cat. 6: Animal sounds
4P. Langner (50-52)
Neuronal Mechanisms of Pitch and Harmony
Cat. 1: Pitch
Cat. 2: Harmony

Testing whether

human

musical preferences

for

consonances and non-disturbing s

ounds

exist in

nonhuman primates
To highlight the uniqueness of human culture by contrasting ritual and instrumental (goal





oriented) behavior.
Emphasize vocal learning as an enabling device for ritual culture
Providing an empirical basis for research on the evolution of music making in humans
Explanation for pitch perception and the preference of the hearing system for harmonic relationships

1) Dis

sonant

versus con





sonant two

-note chords of

synthesized complex tones with ten harmonics

.

2) Aversive ”screeching” sound versus white noise CR: Western

/ Neutral

Discussion of voc

al learning

in humans and birds

.

Songs of whales, seals, parrots, hummingbirds, and songbirds
CR:

---
Human and animal sound production. Discussion of music and language: simi





larities and differences, design features.
Sound production in birds, whales, dolphins, seals.
Ape drumming.
CR:

---
No musical material
CR:

---

. a)


Humans

, b) Tamarin

monkeys can trigger two kinds of sound by
choosing their position in experiment areas. Time

spent

on each side is measured
Review of ritual human culture and of vocal learning, which is

restricted to humans,

whales, seals

, and birds, not

shared by apes
Review of vocal learning in birds, cetaceans (whales and dolphins), pinnipeds (seals and sea lions), hominids. Clapping and drumming in apes
Review of theory and anatomical details

suggesting

an explanation of the brain’s extraction of periodicy pi

tch

Comparing

human acoustic

preferences with preferences of monkeys
Stages of imitation of ”conformal motive” in vocal output:
1) Subsong, babbling
2) Practicing pattern production 3) High

-fidelity

replication
Phylogeny of musical abilities. Possible adaptive functions of music in evolution
Temporal processing of periodic acoustic signals in brain stem and inferior colliculus. Anatomy of ventrolateral lemniscus

The studies suggest that simple acoustic preferen

ces

that are pronounced i

n

humans are not shared by primate relatives. Additional cross

-cultural research is
needed
We broke with the apes by
adding ritual culture to instrumental (practically oriented) culture.
Suggestion: The

”conformal

motive”

seem

s to play

a

profound role i

n ritual culture

Arguments for the evolutionary significance of song and motherese in childcare. Ape drumming:
potential homologue of instrumental music
Suggestion: The recognition of musical harmony, or consonance, is an intrinsic property of our

brains

P: indicates a short poster pape

r, e.g. 4P
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