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Related Concept Videos

Beats01:09

Beats

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The study of music provides many examples of the superposition of waves and the constructive and destructive interference that occurs. Very few examples of music being performed consist of a single source playing a single frequency for an extended period of time. A single frequency of sound for an extended period might be monotonous to the point of irritation, similar to the unwanted drone of an aircraft engine or a loud fan. Music is pleasant and exciting due to mixing the changing frequencies...
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Pulse rhythm01:30

Pulse rhythm

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Pulse rhythm refers to the pattern of pulsations within specific intervals, offering valuable insights into the regularity or irregularity of the heart's beats as observed through the pattern of pulsation within specific intervals. A regular pulse exhibits a consistent heart rate with uniform waveforms and pulsation force, variations of which can be classified as normal, weak, or bounding.
Conversely, an irregular pulse pattern is termed dysrhythmia, stemming from disruptions in cardiac...
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Rolling With Slipping01:14

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Rolling with slipping is a physical phenomenon that occurs when a rolling object experiences both rotational and linear motion but also experiences frictional forces that cause slipping. This phenomenon can occur in various situations, such as when a tire rolls on a wet road or a ball rolls on a rough surface.
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Sound Waves01:01

Sound Waves

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Sound waves can be thought of as fluctuations in the pressure of a medium through which they propagate. Since the pressure also makes the medium's particles vibrate along its direction of motion, the waves can be modeled as the displacement of the medium's particles from their mean position.
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Rolling Without Slipping01:09

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People have observed the rolling motion without slipping ever since the invention of the wheel. For example, one can look at the interaction between a car's tires and the surface of the road. If the driver presses the accelerator to the floor so that the tires spin without the car moving forward, there must be kinetic friction between the wheels and the road's surface. If the driver slowly presses the accelerator, causing the car to move forward, the tires roll without slipping. It is...
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Actin Treadmilling01:18

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Actin filaments undergo polymerization and depolymerization from either end. The polymerization and depolymerization rates depend on the cytosolic concentration of free G-actins. The polymerization rate is generally higher at the plus or barbed end, while the depolymerization rate is higher at the minus or pointed end. At a steady state, critical concentration describes the concentration of free G-actin monomers at which the polymerization rate at the plus end is equal to that of the...
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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Jan 10, 2026

Real-Time Proxy-Control of Re-Parameterized Peripheral Signals using a Close-Loop Interface
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Real-Time Proxy-Control of Re-Parameterized Peripheral Signals using a Close-Loop Interface

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Groove to the music.

Asif A Ghazanfar1,2, Gavin Steingo3

  • 1Princeton Neuroscience Institute, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ, USA.

Science (New York, N.Y.)
|November 27, 2025
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Tapping macaques offer insights into musicality evolution. Their rhythmic abilities suggest a shared evolutionary basis for music perception and production in primates.

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Uncovering Beat Deafness: Detecting Rhythm Disorders with Synchronized Finger Tapping and Perceptual Timing Tasks
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Area of Science:

  • Comparative psychology
  • Evolutionary biology
  • Primate behavior

Background:

  • Musicality, the capacity to create and perceive music, is a hallmark of human culture.
  • Understanding the evolutionary origins of musicality requires examining non-human animals, particularly primates.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate rhythmic abilities in long-tailed macaques (Macaca fascicularis).
  • To explore the potential evolutionary precursors to human musicality.

Main Methods:

  • Observing spontaneous rhythmic tapping in macaques during drumming tasks.
  • Analyzing the temporal patterns and variability of their taps.

Main Results:

  • Macaques exhibited spontaneous, non-learned rhythmic tapping behavior.
  • Tapping patterns showed evidence of temporal regularity and variability, akin to basic musical elements.

Conclusions:

  • Rhythmic abilities may be more widespread in primates than previously thought.
  • These findings suggest that the evolutionary roots of musicality are ancient and shared among primates.