Bertolo Mila, Snarskis Martynas, Kyritsis Thanos, Yurdum Lidya, Bainbridge Constance M, Atwood S, Hilton Courtney B, Keomurjian Anya, Lee Judy S, Mackiel Alex, Mak Vanessa, Shin Mijoo, Bitran Alma, Shilton Dor, Delasanta Lana, Do Hang Heather, Lang Jenna, Irani Tenaaz, Kangatharan Jayanthiny, Lafleur Kevin, Malko Nashua, Atkinson Quentin D, Singh Manvir, Mehr Samuel A
Integrated Program in Neuroscience, McGill University, Montreal, QC, Canada.
Centre for Research on Brain, Language, and Music, McGill University, Montreal, QC, Canada.
Open Mind (Camb). 2025 Jul 7;9:844-863. doi: 10.1162/opmi.a.4. eCollection 2025.
A comprehensive cognitive science requires broad sampling of human behavior to justify general inferences about the mind. For example, the field of psycholinguistics relies on a rich history of comparative study, with many available resources that systematically document many languages. Surprisingly, despite a longstanding interest in questions of universality and diversity, the psychology of music has few such resources. Here, we report the , an open-access corpus of vocal music ( = 1007 song excerpts), with accompanying metadata detailing each song's region of origin, language (of 413 languages represented here), and one of 10 behavioral contexts (e.g., work, storytelling, mourning, lullaby, dance). The corpus is designed to sample both broadly, with a large cross-section of societies and languages; and deeply, with many songs representing three well-studied language families (Atlantic-Congo, Austronesian, and Indo-European). This design facilitates direct comparison of musical and vocal features across cultures, principled approaches to sampling stimuli for experiments, and evaluation of models of the cultural evolution of song. In this paper we describe the corpus and provide two proofs of concept, demonstrating its utility. We report (1) a conceptual replication of previous findings that the acoustical forms of songs are predictive of their behavioral contexts, including in previously unstudied contexts (e.g., children's play songs); and (2) similarities in acoustic content of songs across cultures are predictable, in part, by the relatedness of those cultures.
一门全面的认知科学需要广泛采集人类行为样本,以便为有关心智的一般性推断提供依据。例如,心理语言学领域依赖于丰富的比较研究历史,有许多可利用的资源系统地记录了多种语言。令人惊讶的是,尽管长期以来人们对普遍性和多样性问题很感兴趣,但音乐心理学却几乎没有这样的资源。在此,我们报告了一个声乐开放获取语料库(包含1007首歌曲片段),并附带元数据,详细说明了每首歌曲的起源地区、语言(这里涵盖413种语言)以及10种行为背景之一(例如,工作、讲故事、哀悼、摇篮曲、舞蹈)。该语料库的设计旨在进行广泛采样,涵盖大量不同社会和语言;同时也进行深入采样,有许多歌曲代表了三个经过充分研究的语系(大西洋 - 刚果语系、南岛语系和印欧语系)。这种设计便于跨文化直接比较音乐和声乐特征,为实验采样刺激提供有原则的方法,并评估歌曲文化进化模型。在本文中,我们描述了该语料库并提供了两个概念验证,证明了它的实用性。我们报告:(1)对先前研究结果的概念性复制,即歌曲的声学形式能够预测其行为背景,包括在先前未研究的背景中(例如儿童游戏歌曲);(2)跨文化歌曲声学内容的相似性部分可通过这些文化的关联性来预测。