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Press Release of a study from the Goldsmith University of
London
News from Goldsmiths
How music 'moves' us: Listeners'
brains second-guess the composer
Published: 15 January 2010 13:00
Have you ever accidentally
pulled your headphone socket out while listening to music? What
happens when the music stops? Psychologists believe that our
brains continuously predict what is going to happen next in a
piece of music. So, when the music stops, your brain may still
have expectations about what should happen next. A new paper
published in NeuroImage predicts that these expectations should
be different for people with different musical experience and
sheds light on the brain mechanisms involved.
Research by Marcus Pearce, Geraint Wiggins, Joydeep Bhattacharya
and their colleagues at Goldsmiths, University of London has
shown that expectations are likely to be based on learning
through experience with music. Music has a grammar, which, like
language, consists of rules that specify which notes can follow
which other notes in a piece of music. According to Pearce: "the
question is whether the rules are hard-wired into the auditory
system or learned through experience of listening to music and
recording, unconsciously, which notes tend to follow others."
The researchers asked 40 people to listen to hymn melodies
(without lyrics) and state how expected or unexpected they found
particular notes. They simulated a human mind listening to music
with two computational models. The first model uses hard-wired
rules to predict the next note in a melody. The second model
learns through experience of real music which notes tend to
follow others, statistically speaking, and uses this knowledge
to predict the next note.
The results showed that the statistical model predicts the
listeners' expectations better than the rule-based model. It
also turned out that expectations were higher for musicians than
for non-musicians and for familiar melodies-which also suggests
that experience has a strong effect on musical predictions.
In a second experiment, the researchers examined the brain waves
of a further 20 people while they listened to the same hymn
melodies. Although in this experiment the participants were not
explicitly informed about the locations of the expected and
unexpected notes, their brain waves in responses to these notes
differed markedly. Typically, the timing and location of the
brain wave patterns in response to unexpected notes suggested
that they stimulate responses that synchronise different brain
areas associated with processing emotion and movement. On these
results, Bhattacharya commented, "� as if music indeed 'moves'
us!"
These findings may help scientists to understand why we listen
to music. "It is thought that composers deliberately confirm and
violate listeners' expectations in order to communicate emotion
and aesthetic meaning," said Pearce. Understanding how the brain
generates expectations could illuminate our experience of
emotion and meaning when we listen to music. |
More Information Here
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