The Music Cognition Group (MCG) is part of the Department of Musicology, the Institute for Logic, Language and Computation (ILLC), and Amsterdam Brain and Cognition (ABC) of the University of Amsterdam (UvA) and is housed at LAB42, Science Park Amsterdam.
Our research offers interdisciplinary perspectives on the capacity to perceive, make, and appreciate music (‘musicality’ for short). It asks what music is for and why every human culture has it, whether musicality is a uniquely human capacity, and what biological and cognitive mechanisms underlie it.
The current research program aims to identify the basic mechanisms that constitute the cognitive and biological basis of musicality, as well as developing theoretical, computational and empirical methods for analyzing various musicality phenotypes.
Meet our researchersResearch agendaMedia attentionWe are all born with a predisposition for music, a predisposition that develops spontaneously and is refined by listening to music. Nearly everyone possesses the musical skills essential to experiencing and appreciating music. Think of “relative pitch,” recognizing a melody separately from the exact pitch or tempo at which it is sung, and “beat perception,” hearing regularity in a varying rhythm. Even human newborns turn out to be sensitive to intonation or melody, rhythm, and the dynamics of the sounds in their surroundings. Everything suggests that human biology is already primed for music at birth with respect to both the perception and enjoyment of listening.
Human musicality is clearly special; Musicality being a set of natural, spontaneously developing traits based on, or constrained by, our cognitive abilities (attention, memory, expectation) and our biological predisposition. But what makes it special? Is it because we appear to be the only animals with such a vast musical repertoire? Is our musical predisposition unique, like our linguistic ability? Or is musicality something with a long evolutionary history that we share with other animals? (Honing, 2019).
Attendees of our workshop, held last week in Amsterdam, discussing guidelines for studying the evolution of musicality, w/ our honoured guest Aniruddh D. Patel and researchers from a variety of fields, including Music Studies, Behavioural Ecology, Cognitive Neuroscience, Animal Behaviour, Genetics and More!
Prof. Aniruddh D. Patel will visit the Netherlands from 18-22 March 2024 to discuss his work on the origins of musicality, with a public talk at MPI Nijmegen on Tuesday 19 March and a fully booked (invitation-only) workshop on Friday 22 March in Amsterdam.
Uit het onderzoek van de Universiteit van Amsterdam blijkt dat ritmegevoel niet alleen is aangeleerd, maar aangeboren. Zelfs baby's van een paar dagen oud hebben het door als je iets aan de regelmaat van muziek verandert. En ook sommige apen gaan spontaan bewegen op muziek. Hoe de onderzoekers hierachter kwamen, en waarom we überhaupt ritmegevoel hebben, leer je in deze video. #UvN
It turns out we were born to groove: The evolution of beat perception likely unfolded gradually among primates reaching its pinnacle in humans.
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