| Literature DB >> 21251325 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The biological origin of music, its universal appeal across human cultures and the cause of its beauty remain mysteries. For example, why is Ludwig Van Beethoven considered a musical genius but Kylie Minogue is not? Possible answers to these questions will be framed in the context of Information Theory. PRESENTATION OF THE HYPOTHESIS: The entire life-long sensory data stream of a human is enormous. The adaptive solution to this problem of scale is information compression, thought to have evolved to better handle, interpret and store sensory data. In modern humans highly sophisticated information compression is clearly manifest in philosophical, mathematical and scientific insights. For example, the Laws of Physics explain apparently complex observations with simple rules. Deep cognitive insights are reported as intrinsically satisfying, implying that at some point in evolution, the practice of successful information compression became linked to the physiological reward system. I hypothesise that the establishment of this "compression and pleasure" connection paved the way for musical appreciation, which subsequently became free (perhaps even inevitable) to emerge once audio compression had become intrinsically pleasurable in its own right. TESTING THE HYPOTHESIS: For a range of compositions, empirically determine the relationship between the listener's pleasure and "lossless" audio compression. I hypothesise that enduring musical masterpieces will possess an interesting objective property: despite apparent complexity, they will also exhibit high compressibility. IMPLICATIONS OF THE HYPOTHESIS: Artistic masterpieces and deep Scientific insights share the common process of data compression. Musical appreciation is a parasite on a much deeper information processing capacity. The coalescence of mathematical and musical talent in exceptional individuals has a parsimonious explanation. Musical geniuses are skilled in composing music that appears highly complex to the ear yet transpires to be highly simple to the mind. The listener's pleasure is influenced by the extent to which the auditory data can be resolved in the simplest terms possible.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21251325 PMCID: PMC3035585 DOI: 10.1186/1756-0500-4-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Res Notes ISSN: 1756-0500
Example compression algorithms from various scientific disciplines.
| Subject | Compression algorithm | Originator |
|---|---|---|
| Philosophy | Occam's Razor | William of Occam (1288-1348) |
| Mathematics | Euclid's Geometry | Euclid (300 BC) |
| Physics | Einstein's General Relativity | Albert Einstein (1879-1955) |
| Chemistry | Mendeleev's Periodic Table | Dimitri Mendeleev (1834-1907) |
| Biology | Darwin's Evolution | Charles Darwin (1809-1882) |
Figure 1From a compression standpoint, highly ordered patterns are boring because they are too simple while random chaotic patterns are boring because they are too complex. On the other hand, intermediately complex patterns - those that promise a chance of compression following some effort - are of particular interest. I use the terms the "edge of order" and the "edge of chaos" to define points of inflection in the imagined relationship between information content and ease of compressibility. The high pay-off zone is somewhere in the middle.
Figure 2The appreciation of music is a function of information compression. From our perspective as human listeners, this reflects the mismatch in complexity between what our ears initially perceive, versus what our brains ultimately interpret. This hypothesis is schematically represented here for two pieces of music: Beethoven's 3rd Symphony and ElBeano's Ventilator trance techno. The two compositions are approximately the same length (4 minutes 7 seconds versus 4 minutes 9 seconds), and approximately the same initial audio file size (43.6 Mb versus 44.0 Mb). Beethoven's piece has the interesting dual property of appearing more sophisticated but being more simple (compressing to 40.6% as compared to 65.8% of original file size). The learning curve, or "information compression epiphany", is thus substantially larger and more rewarding for Beethoven's piece.
Information compression and the Arts.
| REGULARITY (COMPRESSIBILITY) | MUSIC | VISUAL ARTS | POETRY | EMOTIONAL RESPONSE |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| HIGHLY REGULAR (trivial compression) | Repeated notes, simple ascending scales | Simple geometric shapes | Limericks, nursery rhymes (anapaestic tetrameter)* | Indifference, boredom (irritation?) |
| EDGE OF REGULARITY (challenging compression) | Beethoven (Classical) | Picasso (Classicism, Surrealism, Cubism) | Shakespeare (Iambic pentameter) | Pleasure |
| EDGE OF CHAOS (very challenging compression) | Duke Ellington (Jazz) | Jackson Pollack (Abstract expressionism) | Robert Louis Stevenson (Free verse) | Pleasure |
| CHAOTIC (impossible compression) | Noise | Random splashes of paint | Random letter/word generator | Indifference, boredom (irritation?) |
The most appealing Artistic patterns are in between order and chaos, with those that are challenging but highly compressible including Beethoven's music. * Limericks and nursery rhymes arguably sit closer to the "edge of regularity" than "highly regular", but were positioned here to discriminate them from more sophisticated literary art.