4.4 Article

Children Infer the Behavioral Contexts of Unfamiliar Foreign Songs

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-GENERAL
Volume 152, Issue 3, Pages 839-850

Publisher

AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/xge0001289

Keywords

music; psychoacoustics; development; cross-cultural; evolution

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This study investigated children's ability to make inferences about the behavioral contexts of music and found that they were able to accurately infer the original behavioral contexts of music, which was highly correlated with the inferences made by adults. This suggests that the universal links between musical form and function can drive accurate inferences about the behavioral contexts of music, and extensive musical experience is not always necessary.
Music commonly appears in behavioral contexts in which it can be seen as playing a functional role, as when a parent sings a lullaby with the goal of soothing a baby. Humans readily make inferences, based on the sounds they hear, regarding the behavioral contexts associated with music. These inferences tend to be accurate, even if the songs are in foreign languages or unfamiliar musical idioms; upon hearing a Blackfoot lullaby, a Korean listener with no experience of Blackfoot music, language, or broader culture is far more likely to judge the music's function as used to soothe a baby than used for dancing. Are such inferences shaped by musical exposure or does the human mind naturally detect links between musical form and function of these kinds? Children's developing experience of music provides a clear test of this question. We studied musical inferences in a large sample of children recruited online (N = 5,033), who heard dance, lullaby, and healing songs from 70 world cultures and who were tasked with guessing the original behavioral context in which each was performed. Children reliably inferred the original behavioral contexts with only minimal improvement in performance from the youngest (age 4) to the oldest (age 16), providing little evidence for an effect of experience. Children's inferences tightly correlated with those of adults for the same songs, as collected from a similar online experiment (N = 98,150). Moreover, similar acoustical features were predictive of the inferences of both samples. These findings suggest that accurate inferences about the behavioral contexts of music, driven by universal links between form and function in music across cultures, do not always require extensive musical experience.

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