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Section D: Schwartz's study also casts light on the long-running question of whether
animals understand or appreciate music. Despite the apparent abundance of "music" in
the natural world- birdsong, whalesong, wolf howls, synchronized chimpanzee hooting
previous studies have found that many laboratory animals don't show a great affinity for
the human variety of music making. Marc Hauser and Josh McDermott of Harvard argued
in the July issue of Nature Neuroscience that animals don't create or perceive music the
way we do. The act that laboratory monkeys can show recognition of human tunes is
evidence, they say, of shared general features of the auditory system, not any specific
chimpanzee musical ability. As for birds, those most musical beasts, they generally
recognize their own tunes - a narrow repertoire - but don't generate novel melodies like
we do. There are no avian Mozarts.
But what's been played to the animals, Schwartz notes, is human music. If animals evolve
preferences for sound as we do - based upon the soundscape in which they live - then
their "music" would be fundamentally different from ours. In the same way our scales
derive from human utterances, a cat's idea of a good tune would derive from yowls and
meows. To demonstrate that animals don't appreciate sounds the way we do, we'd need
evidence that they don't respond to "music" constructed from their own sound
environment.
Section E: No matter how the connection between language and music is parsed, what
is apparent is that our sense of music, even our love for it, is as deeply rooted in our
biology and in our brains as language is. This is most obvious with babies, says Sandra
Trehub at the University of Toronto, who also published a paper in the Nature
Neuroscience special issue.
For babies, music and speech are on a continuum. Mothers use musical speech to
"regulate infants' emotional states." Trehub says. Regardless of what language they
speak, the voice all mothers use with babies is the same: "something between speech
and song." This kind of communication "puts the baby in a trance-like state, which may
proceed to sleep or extended periods of rapture." So if the babies of the world could
understand the latest research on language and music, they probably wouldn't be very