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Action-based effects on music perception.

Pieter-Jan Maes1, Marc Leman2, Caroline Palmer3

  • 1Department of Music Research, McGill University Montreal, QC, Canada.

Frontiers in Psychology
|January 24, 2014
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Music perception is deeply intertwined with the human motor system, challenging traditional views. Action and perception are dynamically linked, suggesting a more embodied understanding of how we experience music.

Keywords:
common coding theorydynamical systemsembodied music cognitioninternal modelsensory-motor association learning

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Neuroscience
  • Music Cognition
  • Motor Control

Background:

  • Classical music cognition separates action and perception.
  • Embodied accounts highlight the close coupling of action and perception.
  • Perception is known to influence action tendencies.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To present a theoretical framework for how the motor system influences music perception.
  • To explore the role of common coding theory and internal models.
  • To extend embodied accounts by including forward modeling and empirical evidence.

Main Methods:

  • Theoretical framework development based on common coding theory and internal models (inverse and forward modeling).
  • Extensive review of recent empirical evidence.
  • Demonstration of motor dysfunction's impact on perceptual abilities.

Main Results:

  • The human motor system and its actions reciprocally influence music perception.
  • Forward modeling offers an alternative mechanism for action-modulated music perception.
  • Motor dysfunctions correlate with auditory perceptual deficits.

Conclusions:

  • Music perception is significantly shaped by the motor system, indicating a highly embodied musical mind.
  • Advocacy for a dynamic view of embodied cognition, integrating action, perception, introspection, and social interaction.