ADD ANI AS A TRUSTED SOURCE
googleads
Menu
Quirky

Study reveals brain's 'prediction machine' anticipates future when listening to music

Washington [US], August 20 (ANI): Whether listening to a concerto by Bach or the latest pop tunes on Spotify, the human brain does not wait passively for the song to unfold. Instead, when a musical phrase has an unresolved or uncertain quality about it our brains automatically predict how the melody will end.

ANI Aug 20, 2021 08:01 IST googleads

Representative Image

Washington [US], August 20 (ANI): Whether listening to a concerto by Bach or the latest pop tunes on Spotify, the human brain does not wait passively for the song to unfold. Instead, when a musical phrase has an unresolved or uncertain quality about it our brains automatically predict how the melody will end.
Past ideas on how the human brain processes music suggested that musical phrases are perceived by looking backward rather than forward. New research published in the journal Psychological Science, however, suggests that the human brain considers what has come before to anticipate what comes next.
"The brain is constantly one step ahead and matches expectations to what is about to happen," said Niels Chr. Hansen, a fellow at the Aarhus Institute of Advanced Studies and one of two lead authors on the paper. "This finding challenges previous assumptions that musical phrases feel finished only after the next phase has begun."
Hansen and his colleagues focused their research on one of the basic units of music, the musical phrase--a sequence or pattern of sounds that form a distinct musical "thought" within a melody. As a sentence, a musical phrase is a coherent and complete part of a larger whole, but it may end with some uncertainty about what comes next in the melody.
The new research shows that listeners use these moments of uncertainty, or high entropy, to determine where one phrase ends and another begins.
"We only know a little about how the brain determines when things start and end," said Hansen. "Here, music provides a perfect domain to measure something that is otherwise difficult to measure--namely, uncertainty."
To study the brain's musical predictive power, the researchers had 38 participants listen, note by note, to chorale melodies by Bach. Participants could pause and restart the music by pressing the space bar on a computer keyboard.
The participants were told that they would be tested afterward on how well they remembered the melodies. This allowed the researchers to use the time participants dwelled on each tone as an indirect measure of their understanding of musical phrasing.
In a second experiment, 31 different participants listened to the same musical phrases and then assessed how complete they sounded. The participants judged melodies that ended on high-entropy tones to be more complete--and lingered on them longer.
"We were able to show that people have a tendency to experience high-entropy tones as musical-phrase endings. This is basic research that makes us more aware of how the human brain acquires new knowledge not just from music, but also when it comes to language, movements, or other things that take place over time," said Haley Kragness, a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Toronto Scarborough and the paper's second lead author.
Over the long term, the researchers hope that the results can be used to optimize communication and interactions between people--or, alternatively, to understand how artists are able to tease or trick audiences.
"This study shows that humans harness the statistical properties of the world around them not only to predict what is likely to happen next but also to parse streams of complex, continuous input into smaller, more manageable segments of information," said Hansen.
Other collaborators on the study were Laurel Trainor (McMaster University), Peter Vuust (Aarhus University), and Marcus Pearce (Queen Mary, University of London).
The study was funded by the EU Horizon 2020 program, the Aarhus University Research Foundation, the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada, and the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada. (ANI)

Get the App

What to Read Next

Food

Study finds how diet has major impact on risk of Alzheimer's

Study finds how diet has major impact on risk of Alzheimer's

In a detailed study, researchers identify which diets are effective in lowering the risk of developing Alzheimer's disease.

Read More
Relationships

Moral reasoning displays characteristic patterns in brain: Study

Moral reasoning displays characteristic patterns in brain: Study

Philosophers, psychologists and neuroscientists have passionately argued whether moral judgments share something distinctive that separates them from non-moral matters. Moral monists claim that morality is unified by a common characteristic and that all moral issues involve concerns about harm.

Read More
Parenting

Kindergarten misbehaviour may cost society in the long run: Study

Kindergarten misbehaviour may cost society in the long run: Study

For the first time, a new economic analysis has linked kindergarten pupils' misbehaviour to significant societal costs in terms of criminality, associated medical expenses, and lost productivity as they grow up.

Read More
Quirky

Air pollution makes it difficult for bees to find flowers: Study

Air pollution makes it difficult for bees to find flowers: Study

According to a new study, air pollution prevents bees from finding flowers because it degrades the scent.

Read More
Quirky

Sense of order distinguishes humans from other animals: Study

Sense of order distinguishes humans from other animals: Study

Already earlier research at Stockholm University has suggested that only humans have the ability to recognize and remember so-called sequential information and that this ability is a fundamental building block underlying unique human cultural abilities.

Read More
Home About Us Our Products Advertise Contact Us Terms & Condition Privacy Policy

Copyright © aninews.in | All Rights Reserved.