The two target articles address the origins of music in complementary ways. However, both proposals focus on overt musical behaviour, largely ignoring the role of perception and cognition, and they blur the boundaries between the potential origins of language and music. To resolve this, an alternative research strategy is proposed that focuses on the core cognitive components of musicality
The aims of this article are to select, to summarise, and to critically discuss the principal topi...
Why do people attach importance to the wordless language we call music? Musical Cognition suggests t...
Cognitive function of music, its origin, and evolution has been a mystery until recently. Here we di...
Language and music share many commonalities, both as natural phenomena and as subjects of intellectu...
Interdisciplinary perspectives on the capacity to perceive, appreciate, and make music. Research sho...
Language and music share many commonalities, both as natural phenomena and as subjects of intellectu...
First systematically discussed by Darwin (1871), theories of a musical precursor to language have s...
Archaeological evidence for musical activities pre-dates even the earliest-known cave art and it rem...
Unlike any other species, humans possess the unique abilities to make and enjoy music, and to produc...
What was the role of music in the evolutionary history of human beings? We address this question fro...
This paper aims to give an overview of the expanding interdisciplinarybranch of cognitive science in...
The paper will draw on ethnomusicological, cognitive and neuroscientific evidence in suggestin...
The possible links between music and language continue to intrigue sci-entists interested in the nat...
The origin of human musicality is often discussed within a dichotomous nature-or-culture framework. ...
Language is traditionally considered as the basis of human intelligence. Music, although accepted as...
The aims of this article are to select, to summarise, and to critically discuss the principal topi...
Why do people attach importance to the wordless language we call music? Musical Cognition suggests t...
Cognitive function of music, its origin, and evolution has been a mystery until recently. Here we di...
Language and music share many commonalities, both as natural phenomena and as subjects of intellectu...
Interdisciplinary perspectives on the capacity to perceive, appreciate, and make music. Research sho...
Language and music share many commonalities, both as natural phenomena and as subjects of intellectu...
First systematically discussed by Darwin (1871), theories of a musical precursor to language have s...
Archaeological evidence for musical activities pre-dates even the earliest-known cave art and it rem...
Unlike any other species, humans possess the unique abilities to make and enjoy music, and to produc...
What was the role of music in the evolutionary history of human beings? We address this question fro...
This paper aims to give an overview of the expanding interdisciplinarybranch of cognitive science in...
The paper will draw on ethnomusicological, cognitive and neuroscientific evidence in suggestin...
The possible links between music and language continue to intrigue sci-entists interested in the nat...
The origin of human musicality is often discussed within a dichotomous nature-or-culture framework. ...
Language is traditionally considered as the basis of human intelligence. Music, although accepted as...
The aims of this article are to select, to summarise, and to critically discuss the principal topi...
Why do people attach importance to the wordless language we call music? Musical Cognition suggests t...
Cognitive function of music, its origin, and evolution has been a mystery until recently. Here we di...