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Human singing as a form of bio-communication

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Warianty tytułu
Języki publikacji
EN
Abstrakty
EN
Most probably music, similarly to human speech, represents a biological adaptation [1], and singing is a mode of communication older than speech, present already in ancestors of Homo sapiens [2]. In various species of apes vocal expression has been demonstrated to be linked with expression of emotions [3], which indicates that singing is a carrier of emotional information which in evolution has appeared before formation of Homo sapiens. Hierarchical pattern of processing sound information in human cognitive system [4] allows to assume that singing may induce in the recipient both basic emotions and more complex reactions, linked to altered mood or induction of emotions. Processing of specific musical stimuli evokes specific emotional reactions [5]. Contemporary knowledge on processing of music in the nervous system and evolutionary perspective permit to distinguish such traits of musical course which code data on the type and intensity of emotions. According to the authors, qualitative coding of principal emotions in musical course involves mainly segmental level using physical traits of the sound, such as intensity and timbre of sound while quantitative coding at the suprasegmental level involves mainly changes in tempo and intensity of sounds. In emotional communication conducted through a musical course the shared by the broadcaster and recipient set of culture-specific data on traits of music necessary for its correct processing in specific structures of nervous system, linked to cognitive processes, also plays a significant role. In the study a hierarchical model of singing structure was suggested, which attempts to explain the way in which expression is coded and emotions are perceived in interpersonal communication.
Rocznik
Strony
79--83
Opis fizyczny
Bibliogr. 36 poz., wykr.
Twórcy
  • Nicolaus Copernicus University - Collegium Medicum, Bydgoszcz, ul. Jagiellońska 13, Poland
  • Nicolaus Copernicus University - Collegium Medicum, Bydgoszcz, ul. Jagiellońska 13, Poland
Bibliografia
  • 1. Gray P.M., Krause B., Atema J., Payne R., Krumhansl C, Baptista L.: The Music of Nature and the Nature of Music. Science 2001, 291: 52-54.
  • 2. Mithen S.: The Singing Neanderthals. The Origin of Music, Language, Mind, and Body. Harvard University Press: Cambridge 2006.
  • 3. Hauser M.D.: The Sound and the Fury: Primate Voca¬lizations as Reflections of Emotion and Thought. In: Wallin N.L., Merker B., Brown S. (eds), The Origins of Music. MIT Press: London 1999, pp. 77-102.
  • 4. Koelsch S., Siebel W.A.: Towards a neural basis of music perception. Trends in Cognitive Sciences 2005, 9/12: 578-584.
  • 5. Juslin P.N.: Communicating Emotion in Music Performance: a Review and Theoretical Framework. In: Juslin P.N., Sloboda J.A. (eds), Music and Emotion. Theory and research. Oxford University Press: Oxford 2001, 309-337.
  • 6. Geissmann T: Gibbon Songs and Human Music from an Evolutionary Perspective. In: Wallin N.L., Merker B., Brown S. (eds), The Origins of Music. MIT Press: Cam¬bridge-London 2000, pp. 103-123.
  • 7. Tembrock G.: Tierstimmenforschung. Eine Einfiihrung in die Bioakustik. Ziemsen Verlag: Wittenberg 1977.
  • 8. Merker B.: Is There a Biology of Music, and Why Does it Matter? In: Kopiez R., Lehmann A.C., Wolther I., Wolf Ch. (eds), Proceedings of the 5th Triennial ESCOM Conference. Hanover University of Music and Drama 2003, 402-405.
  • 9. Roederer J.: On the Concept of Information and Its Role in Nature. Entropy 2003, 5/1: 3-33.
  • 10. Striedter G.F.: Principles of Brain Evolution. Sinauer Asso¬ciates, Inc. Publishers: Sunderland 2005.
  • 11. Gorzelanczyk E.J., Wlodarczyk K., Laskowska E., Kunc M., Jelonek J.: Digitalized Drawing Test (Ddt) - The Tool For An Early Subclinical Motor Symptoms Diagnosis. Bio-Algo¬rithms and Med-Systems 2008, 4/8: 93-99.
  • 12. Stockmann D.: Musik - Sprache – Tierkommunikation. International Review of the Aesthetics Sociology of Music 1979, 10: 5-45.
  • 13. Podlipniak P.: Uniwersalia muzyczne. Wydawnictwo Poznańskiego Towarzystwa Przyjaciół Nauk: Poznań 2007.
  • 14. Karpf A.: The Human Voice. Bloomsbury Publishing: New York-London 2006.
  • 15. Darwin Ch.R.: The descent of man, and selection in relation to sex. Vol. II. John Murray: London 1871.
  • 16. Meyer L.B.: Emotion and Meaning in Music. The University of Chicago Press: Chicago-London 1956.
  • 17. Krumhansl C: An Exploratory Study of Musical Emotions and Psychophysiology. Canadian Journal of Experimental Psychology 1997, 51/4: 336-353.
  • 18. Panksepp J., Bernatzky G.: Emotional Sounds and the Brain: the Neuro-Affective Foundations of Musical Appreciation. Behavioral Processes 2002, 60: 133-155.
  • 19. Johnstone I, Scherer K.R.: Vocal Communication of Emotion. In: Lewis M., Haviland-Jones J.M. (eds), Handbook of Emotions. The Guilford Press: New York 2000, pp. 220-235.
  • 20. Roederer J.: The Search for a Survival Value of Music. Music Perception 1984, 1: 350-356.
  • 21. Ridley M.: The Origins of Virtue: Human Instincts and the Evolution of Cooperation. Penguin Books Ltd.: London 1997.
  • 22. Hagen E.H., Bryant G.A.: Music and Dance as a Coalition Signaling System. Human Nature 2003, 14/1: 21-51.
  • 23. Papousek H.: Musicality in Infancy Research: Biologi¬cal and Cultural Origins of Early Musicality. In: Deliege I., Sloboda J. (eds), Musical Beginnings. Oxford University Press: Oxford 1996, pp. 37-55.
  • 24. Dissanayake E.: Root, Leaf, Blossom, or Bole: Concerning the Origin and Adaptive Function of Music. In: Malloch S., Trevarthen C. (eds), Communicative Musicality. Oxford University Press: Oxford 2009, pp. 17-30.
  • 25. Falk D.: Finding Our Tongues: Mothers, Infants and the Origins of Language. Basic Books: New York 2009.
  • 26. Miller G.: Evolution of Human Music through Sexual Selec¬tion. In: Wallin N.L., Merker B., Brown S. (eds), The Origins of Music. MIT Press: London 2000,329-360.
  • 27. Trehub S.E., Trainor L.: Singing to Infants: Lullabies and Play Songs. Advances in Infancy Research 1998, 12: 43-77.
  • 28. Denton D.: The Primordial Emotions. The Dawning of Con¬sciousness. Oxford University Press: New York 2005.
  • 29. Ekman P.: Emotions Revealed: Recognizing Faces and Feelings to Improve Communication and Emotional Life. Times Books: New York 2003.
  • 30. Pankseep J.: Affective Neuroscience: the Foundations of Human and Animal Emotions. Oxford University Press: New York 1998.
  • 31. Damasio A.R.: Descartes Error. Emotion, Reason, and the Human Brain. Avon Books: New York 1994.
  • 32. Janata P., Grafton ST.: Swinging in the Brain: Shared Neural Substrates for Behaviors Related to Sequencing and Music. Nature Neuroscience 2003, 6/7: 682-687.
  • 33. Bielawski L.: Muzyka jako system fonologiczny. Res Facta 1968, 3: 166-171.
  • 34. Welch G.F.: Singing as Communication. In: Miell D., MacDonald R.; Hargreaves D. (eds), Musical Communication. Oxford University Press: New York 2005.
  • 35. Scherer K.R.: Expression of Emotion in Voice and Music. Journal of Voice 1995, 9(3): 235-248.
  • 36. Clynes, M.: Sentics: The Touch of Emotions. Doubleday/Anchor: New York 1977.
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Typ dokumentu
Bibliografia
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