| Literature DB >> 35138480 |
Paola Crespo-Bojorque1, Alexandre Celma-Miralles1,2, Juan M Toro3,4.
Abstract
Humans recognize a melody independently of whether it is played on a piano or a violin, faster or slower, or at higher or lower frequencies. Much of the way in which we engage with music relies in our ability to normalize across these surface changes. Despite the uniqueness of our music faculty, there is the possibility that key aspects in music processing emerge from general sensitivities already present in other species. Here we explore whether other animals react to surface changes in a tune. We familiarized the animals (Long-Evans rats) with the "Happy Birthday" tune on a piano. We then presented novel test items that included changes in pitch (higher and lower octave transpositions), tempo (double and half the speed) and timbre (violin and piccolo). While the rats responded differently to the familiar and the novel version of the tune when it was played on novel instruments, they did not respond differently to the original song and its novel versions that included octave transpositions and changes in tempo.Entities:
Keywords: Familiarization; Music cognition; Pitch; Rats; Tempo; Timbre
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35138480 PMCID: PMC9334415 DOI: 10.1007/s10071-022-01604-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Anim Cogn ISSN: 1435-9448 Impact factor: 2.899
Fig. 1Amplitude waveforms and spectrograms of the original tune (played at 140 bpm on a piano with the tonic centered at C6; resolution of 1024 fast Fourier transform size and a Hamming window, 50% overlap), and one of its pitch-modified versions (the tonic centered at C7), one of its tempo-modified versions (played at 280 bpm) and one of its timbre-modified versions (played on a violin)
Fig. 2Music score for the familiar stimulus and its pitch-modified versions. One novel version is shifted one octave higher, while the other is shifted one octave lower
Stimuli parameters used during familiarization and tests
| Familiarization | Test | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Pitch | Higher | Lower | |
| C6 (1046.5 Hz) | C7 (2093 Hz) | C5 (523.3 Hz) | |
| Tempo | Faster | Slower | |
| 140 bpm | 280 bpm | 70 bpm | |
| Timbre | Keyboard Piano | String Violin | Woodwind Piccolo |
Fig. 3Individual number of responses (single dots) to the familiar (original tune; light blue) and unfamiliar (white) test stimuli across the three tests. Bars show mean and standard error at the group level. Dotted lines show individual changes within each test
Fig. 4Mean number of responses and standard error bars to the two different types of unfamiliar stimuli across the three tests