NPR reports on new brain research re: music

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Heard on NPR this AM the results of some more work done with regard to the
brain processing music. Scientists found that if the person under test was
familiar with the music being played, and the music was interrupted briefly,
the person was unawares and the brain continues to "fill in the blanks". If
the music was unfamiliar, this did not happen. This "memory" appeared to
occur in the area of the brain associated with musical processing; it was
not clear from the report whether other areas were involved as well.

I think the most important implication of this is how little we really know
about how we hear, especially with regard to processing music.

However, to my hobby horse (you knew I'd get there eventually, right? :) I
wonder if this may be involved with our ongoing disputes over testing. The
scientist found the brain would seamlessly fill in the sound for 3-5 seconds
(remember Oohashi's team also found a "lag" in the time it took for
emotional response to build or subside). Is it not possible, therefore,
that the "no difference" null from quick-switch blind testing results from
the brain not really hearing the switch, but rather overriding it, so that
there is no apparent change unless there is a radically (.5 db?) difference
in volume or frequency response. Could this be why some audiophiles feel
they learn more from alternately listening to the same (remembered) piece of
music over and over again, switching (but not instantaneously)? Is it
possible that people familiar with live acoustic music have brains that can
do more of this "fill in the blanks" when hearing reproduced music, and that
the better the reproduction, the more this "fill in the blanks" provides the
emotional satisfaction of the live event, and the audiophile to rate the
equipment in the chain as allowing a pretty good "live" facsimile?

None of this is posted as "being true". All of it is posted as "what if" or
"could it be" hypothesis. Wish I had chosen this field for study...there
must be years of work an avid audiophile could do as follow up to some of
the recent findings (hard-wired "rhythm" and "harmonic" patterns, for
example).

Harry Lavo
"It don't mean a thing if it ain't got that swing" -- Duke Ellington
 
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Harry Lavo wrote:
> Heard on NPR this AM the results of some more work done with regard
to the
> brain processing music.

I bet I know where this is going... ;-)

> Scientists found that if the person under test was
> familiar with the music being played, and the music was interrupted
briefly,
> the person was unawares and the brain continues to "fill in the
blanks". If
> the music was unfamiliar, this did not happen. This "memory"
appeared to
> occur in the area of the brain associated with musical processing; it
was
> not clear from the report whether other areas were involved as well.
>
> I think the most important implication of this is how little we
really know
> about how we hear, especially with regard to processing music.

Do hearing and processing music have anything to do with one another?
This study appears to suggest not. After all, subjects are shown to
"process music" even when they aren't hearing anything at all!

That should be an early clue to how far off the trail you are about to
wander.

> However, to my hobby horse (you knew I'd get there eventually, right?
:) I
> wonder if this may be involved with our ongoing disputes over
testing. The
> scientist found the brain would seamlessly fill in the sound for 3-5
seconds
> (remember Oohashi's team also found a "lag" in the time it took for
> emotional response to build or subside). Is it not possible,
therefore,
> that the "no difference" null from quick-switch blind testing results
from
> the brain not really hearing the switch, but rather overriding it, so
that
> there is no apparent change unless there is a radically (.5 db?)
difference
> in volume or frequency response.

Lots of things are possible, but this study (at least as you have
described it) provides no basis for such speculation. Now, if the study
showed that people continued to "process" a piece of music when the
testers switched to a different piece of music, then I might at least
entertain the possibility that you are right. But anyone who's ever had
that happen to them knows that what you actually hear very quickly
overrides what you had been expecting to hear. It is inconceivable that
switching to the *same* piece of music with some partial loudness
differences would have the opposite effect.

> Could this be why some audiophiles feel
> they learn more from alternately listening to the same (remembered)
piece of
> music over and over again, switching (but not instantaneously)?

No. The reason some audiophiles feel that way is because it allows them
to use psychoacoustic illusion to get the result they want--namely,
proof that they have particularly discerning hearing.

> Is it
> possible that people familiar with live acoustic music have brains
that can
> do more of this "fill in the blanks" when hearing reproduced music,
and that
> the better the reproduction, the more this "fill in the blanks"
provides the
> emotional satisfaction of the live event, and the audiophile to rate
the
> equipment in the chain as allowing a pretty good "live" facsimile?

Lots of things are possible, but this study (at least as you have
described it) provides no basis for such speculation. Now, if the study
had compared subjects' ability to fill in the blanks when listening to
live music and recorded music, and found they did better when the live
music stopped, then I might at least entertain the possibility that you
are right. But that's not what this study compared; it compared people
familiar with a piece of music to people unfamiliar to a piece of
music. (Which, by the way, has nothing whatever to do with familiarity
with "the sound of live acoustic music," if that were even a meaningful
concept.) Furthermore, this study offers no evidence that this
fill-in-the-blank skill is related to emotional satisfaction; the test
was based on familiarity alone.

Consider again the apparent disconnect between what people hear and
what they process. Why should we believe that this disconnect occurs
only when the music stops? Isn't it equally possible that, while we are
actually listening to a piece of music that we are familiar with, our
brain is processing it in some idealized form, and it is that idealized
version that we are conscious of, rather than the sonically imperfect
reproduction we are listening to? Doesn't this study suggest that it
might be better, in listening comparisons, to use music you are
*unfamiliar* with? Answer: No, it does not suggest that, any more than
it bolsters any of your speculations. I just wanted to show you how
easy it is to play this game.

> None of this is posted as "being true". All of it is posted as "what
if" or
> "could it be" hypothesis. Wish I had chosen this field for
study...there
> must be years of work an avid audiophile could do as follow up to
some of
> the recent findings (hard-wired "rhythm" and "harmonic" patterns, for
> example).

Sure. Those are very interesting topics, which is why scientists are
researching them, rather than trying to prove that DBTs are flawed.

bob
 
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Harry Lavo wrote:
> Heard on NPR this AM the results of some more work done with regard
to the
> brain processing music. [huge snippage]



Two words: Daniel Dennett

Read Dennett's works on human perception, conciousness, how our sensory
apparatus informs our awareness, and (especially) how the entire
concept of the brain "filling in" information that doesn't exits is
complete horse puckey.

Read and learn.<
 
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nabob33@hotmail.com wrote:
> Harry Lavo wrote:
> > Heard on NPR this AM the results of some more work done with regard
> to the
> > brain processing music.

> I bet I know where this is going... ;-)

> > Scientists found that if the person under test was
> > familiar with the music being played, and the music was interrupted
> briefly,
> > the person was unawares and the brain continues to "fill in the
> blanks". If
> > the music was unfamiliar, this did not happen. This "memory"
> appeared to
> > occur in the area of the brain associated with musical processing; it
> was
> > not clear from the report whether other areas were involved as well.
> >
> > I think the most important implication of this is how little we
> really know
> > about how we hear, especially with regard to processing music.

> Do hearing and processing music have anything to do with one another?
> This study appears to suggest not. After all, subjects are shown to
> "process music" even when they aren't hearing anything at all!

> That should be an early clue to how far off the trail you are about to
> wander.

> > However, to my hobby horse (you knew I'd get there eventually, right?
> :) I
> > wonder if this may be involved with our ongoing disputes over
> testing. The
> > scientist found the brain would seamlessly fill in the sound for 3-5
> seconds
> > (remember Oohashi's team also found a "lag" in the time it took for
> > emotional response to build or subside). Is it not possible,
> therefore,
> > that the "no difference" null from quick-switch blind testing results
> from
> > the brain not really hearing the switch, but rather overriding it, so
> that
> > there is no apparent change unless there is a radically (.5 db?)
> difference
> > in volume or frequency response.

> Lots of things are possible, but this study (at least as you have
> described it) provides no basis for such speculation. Now, if the study
> showed that people continued to "process" a piece of music when the
> testers switched to a different piece of music, then I might at least
> entertain the possibility that you are right. But anyone who's ever had
> that happen to them knows that what you actually hear very quickly
> overrides what you had been expecting to hear. It is inconceivable that
> switching to the *same* piece of music with some partial loudness
> differences would have the opposite effect.


Harry is of course free to lengthen the switching interval as long as he
likes. The bulk of psychoacoustic research suggests it will decrease,
rather than increase, sensitivity to difference, but what the hey.

But it's good to see him note that 0.5 dB can be a radical difference in
level. Unlike Harry's hypothetical flaw in quick-switching DBT, level
mismatch is an all too real source of error. DBTs routinely attend to it,
sighted comparisons in the audiophile press and online anecdotes tend not
to. Perhaps Harry will devote some posts to meditations on this rather
more definite and pervasive source of erroneous conclusions of difference,
emanating largely from the subjectivist faction of audiophile culture.


--

-S
It's not my business to do intelligent work. -- D. Rumsfeld, testifying
before the House Armed Services Committee
 
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"Harry Lavo" <harry.lavo@rcn.com> wrote in message
news:d15dcm0263i@news4.newsguy.com...
> Heard on NPR this AM the results of some more work done with regard to the
> brain processing music. Scientists found that if the person under test
> was
> familiar with the music being played, and the music was interrupted
> briefly,
> the person was unawares and the brain continues to "fill in the blanks".
> If
> the music was unfamiliar, this did not happen. This "memory" appeared to
> occur in the area of the brain associated with musical processing; it was
> not clear from the report whether other areas were involved as well.
>

A more studied parallel is the filling in the blanks associated with
visionary information. If you walk into a room, have a look around and come
out again, you think you have looked at most things in that room and think
you now know what that room is like. However, if you attatch sensors to the
eyes and brain, it is shown that you only actually look at a few key points
and the brain fills in the rest with what it expects to see based on stored
images and previous experiences. In reality you see very little, yet have no
idea this process is happening.

It seems logical that at least some form of this would occur in auditory
processing too.


Gareth.
 
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>Do hearing and processing music have anything to do with one another?
>This study appears to suggest not. After all, subjects are shown to
>"process music" even when they aren't hearing anything at all!

Haven't you ever heard of persistence of vision? Eyes work this way
also. When watch a movie, you are actually looking at a black screen
about half the time.

This study shows that we process vision and hearing in much the same
way.
 
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"Bob Ross" <bross@berklee.net> wrote in message
news:d17vpl02pe2@news2.newsguy.com...
> Harry Lavo wrote:
> > Heard on NPR this AM the results of some more work done with regard
> to the
> > brain processing music. [huge snippage]
>
>
>
> Two words: Daniel Dennett
>
> Read Dennett's works on human perception, conciousness, how our sensory
> apparatus informs our awareness, and (especially) how the entire
> concept of the brain "filling in" information that doesn't exits is
> complete horse puckey.
>
> Read and learn.<

Okay, here are the exact words from the NPR website summary. Read and
learn.

"Morning Edition, March 14, 2005 · Researchers at Dartmouth College find the
"iPod of the brain." They've learned that the brain's auditory cortex, the
part that handles information from our ears, holds on to musical memories. "

The link: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=4533543
 
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nabob33@hotmail.com wrote:
> Russ Button wrote:
>
>>Musicians listen for harmonic structure, counterpoint, and how the
>>various components of a song work together.
>
>
> Sometimes, when they're thinking about a work on a technical level. But
> they also listen just to listen, like the rest of us.

Sure they do, but musicians generally don't hold high quality in audio to
be of great importance.

>
>>It strikes me that the things that audiophiles treasure are very much
>>sensual - imaging, timbre, tonal balance, etc.
>
>
> I don't think you really mean to say that musicians aren't sensual in
> their listening. It would be more correct, I think, to say that
> musicians and audiophiles, when they are listening on a technical
> level, are listening to different things.Imaging, timbre, and tonal
> balance, are technical factors, just like harmonic structure, etc.

On the whole, I agree.

My wife is a professional violinist. Last year she purchased a
baroque violin (as opposed to a "modern" violin). This instrument
was made in 1774 has was never altered for modern performance, unlike
the great majority of the violins from that period. She spent about
a year and a half playing different violins and was very particular
about what she wanted. All the things we talk about like timbre,
tonal balance and harmonics are fundamental to what she wanted out
of her instrument.

Last year she also bought another modern bow. Now this is a glorified
stick of wood to the rest of us, but to her, the subtleties were
enormous. She spent $12,000 on the bow, and that was actually pretty
middling for a player of her class. And then she bitched at me for
spending $900 on a new Courtois C trumpet! Go figure.

But if she were the one buying our home audio gear, she'd probably be
using something she had left over from her 1975 college dorm room. She
does enjoy the sound of our system, but it's not terribly important to
her.

I can't tell you how many times I've been in the homes of professional
and or serious amatuer musicians and they've got one JVC speaker sitting
on the floor, next to the couch, in one corner with a fern on top, and
the other speaker is in a bookcase on the opposite wall. And their
electronics consist of something like a JVC solid state receiver at
25 watts/channel with a 5 disc CD player and they threw their vinyl
away 15 years ago.

Russ
 
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On 16 Mar 2005 00:48:53 GMT, "Bob Ross" <bross@berklee.net> wrote:

>Harry Lavo wrote:
>> Heard on NPR this AM the results of some more work done with regard
>to the
>> brain processing music. [huge snippage]
>
>
>
>Two words: Daniel Dennett
>
>Read Dennett's works on human perception, conciousness, how our sensory
>apparatus informs our awareness, and (especially) how the entire
>concept of the brain "filling in" information that doesn't exits is
>complete horse puckey.
>
>Read and learn.


Bob,

Dennett is but one of many voices in a conflicting symphony of ideas
respeting imagery. Kosslyn, Fodor, Pylyshyn, Block (etc.) present a
more balanced treatment of pictorialism and the analog-propositional
debates. Keep in mind, most of this is pure conjecture -- a collection
of brain theories with little objective science behind it.

Here's a good introduction by philosopher Nigel Thomas

http://www.calstatela.edu/faculty/nthomas/mipia.htm

JL
 
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Russ Button wrote:
> nabob33@hotmail.com wrote:


>
>>> How can jazz strike out in a new direction if you don't know where
>>> jazz came from? Some guys are needed to preserve the traditions and
>>> some
>>> guys are needed to make new ones.>
>>
>>
>> What we don't need are the guys who want to preserve only some of the
>> traditions.>

>
> If Wynton wants to preserve a certain period of jazz history, then let
> him. He doesn't limit anyone else from playing any other art form. He's
> just doing his own thing. After the Ken Burns series (which I presume
> is where you've decided that Wynton is pedantic), I never once heard
> anyone say that jazz stopped with Duke Ellington.
FYI:
"Marsalis disparaged Davis for abandoning acoustic jazz in favor of
jazz-rock fusion, and Davis sniped that Marsalis was spending too much
time playing classical music and not developing his own improvisational
voice."

http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=16763

WVK
 
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In article <d1qhb801rfh@news1.newsguy.com>, russ@button.com says...

>
> He hit's Graham's hand and says in his heroin ruined voice,
> "I feel fine."

I recall reading that Miles's voice was ruined not from drugs, but
because he had some throat surgery and while recovering he got into a
shouting match with someone (a producer, I think) and ripped everything
apart again. Not a nice guy by any means.

In addition to his "seminal" 50s stuff, I think the 60's stuff with
Herbie Hancock, Tony Williams, et al is quite amazing too -- not so much
for Miles's playing but for everyone else's. I've always felt that
Miles's best feature was the other people who played with him.
 
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Stu Alden wrote:

> In addition to his "seminal" 50s stuff, I think the 60's stuff with
> Herbie Hancock, Tony Williams, et al is quite amazing too -- not so much
> for Miles's playing but for everyone else's. I've always felt that
> Miles's best feature was the other people who played with him.

Miles was much more than just a trumpet player. He was a
musical innovator and a band leader. Look at the other
great band leaders of the period. With the exceptions of
Dizzy Gillespie and Buddy Rich, none of them were really
considered to be great soloists and Grand Masters of their
instruments. But their bands each had a signiture sound
that you can readily identify.

Consider Count Basie for a moment. He was a fine pianist, but
when jazz buffs talk about the giants of the instrument, they
talk about Oscar Peterson, Teddy Wilson, Bud Powell, Bill Evans,
Herbie Hancock, Chick Corea, McCoy Tyner, Bennie Green, etc.
They don't mention Count Basie, Duke Ellington or Stan Kenton
as being at that level of performance.

Compare Woody Herman to Buddy DeFranco, or Charlie Barnett to
Sonny Rollins. The only two bandleaders I can think of who are
also acknowledged to be giants of their respective instruments
are Dizzy Gillespie and Buddy Rich.

So it is with Miles. He was a good trumpet player, but certainly
not in the same league with guys like Dizzy, Clifford Brown,
or even Freddie Hubbard or Woody Shaw. But Miles was a musical
innovator and visionary. Sure he had great players around him,
but he also had the genius to not only recognize the great young
talent when he saw it, he knew which of these guys would be able
to do the things he wanted them to do.

It was like that with Ellington as well. He was also a great
musical innovator and needed not just good players, but the right
players to carry off what he wanted to do. I expect that in
centuries to come, music historians will see Ellington as one
of the great 20th century composers like Aaron Copland,
George Gershwin, Serge Prokofiev, etc. He was much more than
a band leader.

Russ Button

PS. In the issue of Miles vs. Wynton, it is well known that
Miles didn't care for Wynton. During the 1980's, Miles Davis'
favorite trumpet player was Woody Shaw. If you're not familiar
with Woody Shaw, his "Rosewood" alblum was Downbeat Magazine's
1978 alblum of the year and is a must for any serious jazz collector.
Do a search for "Woody Shaw" at Amazon.com and that's the very
first thing that comes up.