Grey Matters: Music and the Mind
- KVRAF
- 1617 posts since 11 Dec, 2008 from Minneapolis
A lecture that draws from cognitive psych / neuroscience / etc. and discusses music. Gets really interesting at 14:00 in or so. Particularly the claims about music being universal and exclusive to humans is pretty interesting, as well as why that may be.
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- KVRist
- 52 posts since 13 Jun, 2009 from San Diego
Thank you for the marvelous distraction, I got lost in the UCTelevision tapes for way longer than I would like to admit. I had seen the 40/40 lecture by Ramachandrin at UCSD which involves visual cortex aspects, but this one was great for the auditory elements. I had heard that parrots responded to rhythm so it was fun to see the tape. Great stuff...
Paul
Paul
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- KVRian
- 1084 posts since 12 Sep, 2008 from Your basement
That was great. So there seem to be parallels between music and language, at least on a "grammatical" level (but apparently not on a "semantic" level).
But I wonder about amusea. The people with this condition cannot distinguish between two different melodies. But what about rhythms? Can you play a snare, like eighth note, eighth note, quarter, quarter and then play the reverse and can they tell the difference?
How about timbres? Can they distinguish between patterns of french horns versus cats being tortured (or bagpipes)?
If so, it's not "amusea" it's just lack of discrimination between patterns of pitches.
But I wonder about amusea. The people with this condition cannot distinguish between two different melodies. But what about rhythms? Can you play a snare, like eighth note, eighth note, quarter, quarter and then play the reverse and can they tell the difference?
How about timbres? Can they distinguish between patterns of french horns versus cats being tortured (or bagpipes)?
If so, it's not "amusea" it's just lack of discrimination between patterns of pitches.
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- KVRist
- 441 posts since 30 Apr, 2007
If not, it would explain a lot about some of the drummers in my high school band days.Ogg Vorbis wrote: But what about rhythms? Can you play a snare, like eighth note, eighth note, quarter, quarter and then play the reverse and can they tell the difference?