Which Melodic Universals Emerge from Repeated Signaling Games? A Note on Lumaca and Baggio (2017) ‡
- PMID: 29664347
- DOI: 10.1162/artl_a_00259
Which Melodic Universals Emerge from Repeated Signaling Games? A Note on Lumaca and Baggio (2017) ‡
Abstract
Music is a peculiar human behavior, yet we still know little as to why and how music emerged. For centuries, the study of music has been the sole prerogative of the humanities. Lately, however, music is being increasingly investigated by psychologists, neuroscientists, biologists, and computer scientists. One approach to studying the origins of music is to empirically test hypotheses about the mechanisms behind this structured behavior. Recent lab experiments show how musical rhythm and melody can emerge via the process of cultural transmission. In particular, Lumaca and Baggio (2017) tested the emergence of a sound system at the boundary between music and language. In this study, participants were given random pairs of signal-meanings; when participants negotiated their meaning and played a "game of telephone" with them, these pairs became more structured and systematic. Over time, the small biases introduced in each artificial transmission step accumulated, displaying quantitative trends, including the emergence, over the course of artificial human generations, of features resembling properties of language and music. In this Note, we highlight the importance of Lumaca and Baggio's experiment, place it in the broader literature on the evolution of language and music, and suggest refinements for future experiments. We conclude that, while psychological evidence for the emergence of proto-musical features is accumulating, complementary work is needed: Mathematical modeling and computer simulations should be used to test the internal consistency of experimentally generated hypotheses and to make new predictions.
Keywords: Iterated learning; cultural transmission; evolution of language; evolution of music; human behavior; universals.
Comment in
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Signaling Games and the Evolution of Structure in Language and Music: A Reply to Ravignani and Verhoef (2018) ‡.Artif Life. 2018 Spring;24(2):154-156. doi: 10.1162/artl_a_00258. Epub 2018 Apr 17. Artif Life. 2018. PMID: 29664349
Comment on
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Cultural Transmission and Evolution of Melodic Structures in Multi-generational Signaling Games.Artif Life. 2017 Summer;23(3):406-423. doi: 10.1162/ARTL_a_00238. Artif Life. 2017. PMID: 28786724
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