Larsson Matz
The Cardiology Clinic, Örebro University Hospital, 701 85, Örebro, Sweden,
Anim Cogn. 2014 Jan;17(1):1-14. doi: 10.1007/s10071-013-0678-z. Epub 2013 Aug 30.
It has been suggested that the basic building blocks of music mimic sounds of moving humans, and because the brain was primed to exploit such sounds, they eventually became incorporated in human culture. However, that raises further questions. Why do genetically close, culturally well-developed apes lack musical abilities? Did our switch to bipedalism influence the origins of music? Four hypotheses are raised: (1) Human locomotion and ventilation can mask critical sounds in the environment. (2) Synchronization of locomotion reduces that problem. (3) Predictable sounds of locomotion may stimulate the evolution of synchronized behavior. (4) Bipedal gait and the associated sounds of locomotion influenced the evolution of human rhythmic abilities. Theoretical models and research data suggest that noise of locomotion and ventilation may mask critical auditory information. People often synchronize steps subconsciously. Human locomotion is likely to produce more predictable sounds than those of non-human primates. Predictable locomotion sounds may have improved our capacity of entrainment to external rhythms and to feel the beat in music. A sense of rhythm could aid the brain in distinguishing among sounds arising from discrete sources and also help individuals to synchronize their movements with one another. Synchronization of group movement may improve perception by providing periods of relative silence and by facilitating auditory processing. The adaptive value of such skills to early ancestors may have been keener detection of prey or stalkers and enhanced communication. Bipedal walking may have influenced the development of entrainment in humans and thereby the evolution of rhythmic abilities.
有人认为,音乐的基本组成部分模仿了人类移动时发出的声音,并且由于大脑倾向于利用此类声音,它们最终融入了人类文化。然而,这又引发了更多问题。为什么基因相近、文化发达的猿类缺乏音乐能力?我们向两足行走的转变是否影响了音乐的起源?由此提出了四种假说:(1)人类的移动和呼吸会掩盖环境中的关键声音。(2)移动的同步性可减少该问题。(3)可预测的移动声音可能会刺激同步行为的进化。(4)两足步态及相关的移动声音影响了人类节奏能力的进化。理论模型和研究数据表明,移动和呼吸产生的噪音可能会掩盖关键的听觉信息。人们常常会下意识地同步步伐。人类的移动可能比非人类灵长类动物产生更可预测的声音。可预测的移动声音可能提高了我们与外部节奏同步以及感受音乐节拍的能力。节奏感有助于大脑区分来自不同声源的声音,也有助于个体之间的动作同步。群体动作的同步性可以通过提供相对安静的时段并促进听觉处理来改善感知。这些技能对早期祖先的适应性价值可能在于更敏锐地察觉猎物或跟踪者以及加强交流。两足行走可能影响了人类同步能力的发展,进而影响了节奏能力的进化。