| Literature DB >> 22375113 |
Jessica Phillips-Silver1, Peter E Keller.
Abstract
When people play music and dance together, they engage in forms of musical joint action that are often characterized by a shared sense of rhythmic timing and affective state (i.e., temporal and affective entrainment). In order to understand the origins of musical joint action, we propose a model in which entrainment is linked to dual mechanisms (motor resonance and action simulation), which in turn support musical behavior (imitation and complementary joint action). To illustrate this model, we consider two generic forms of joint musical behavior: chorusing and turn-taking. We explore how these common behaviors can be founded on entrainment capacities established early in human development, specifically during musical interactions between infants and their caregivers. If the roots of entrainment are found in early musical interactions which are practiced from childhood into adulthood, then we propose that the rehearsal of advanced musical ensemble skills can be considered to be a refined, mimetic form of temporal and affective entrainment whose evolution begins in infancy.Entities:
Keywords: dance; development; ensemble skills; entrainment; joint action; music
Year: 2012 PMID: 22375113 PMCID: PMC3288575 DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2012.00026
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Hum Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5161 Impact factor: 3.169
Figure 1Illustrations of temporal and affective entrainment. The skills of musical ensembles such as a Cuban Jazz band embody temporal entrainment and musical joint action. Affective entrainment can be seen in early forms of joint action between an infant and caretaker, and might provide a foundation for the development of musical skills.
Figure 2Diagram illustrating dual routes by which entrainment supports mechanisms and behaviors in musical joint action. One route leads to emergent coordination (e.g., automatic imitation and chorusing) via motor and/or perceptual resonance. The other route leads to planned coordination (e.g., complementary joint actions involving turn-taking) through action simulation. The vertical arrows in the figure represent relations between mechanisms and behaviors within each route, while horizontal arrows represent potential areas of overlap between the routes (e.g., imitative behavior may arise through resonance alone or through a combination of resonance and simulation). The dotted arrows imply that the behaviors and mechanisms at each level are not mutually exclusive, and may exist in hybrid forms (e.g., non-unison chorusing and hierarchical turn-taking).