The Info Sage

  • Home
  • About Us
  • News Updates
    • Asia News Updates
    • Business News Updates
    • Entertainment News Updates
    • Health News Updates
    • Lifestyles
    • National News Updates
    • Other News
    • Science & Technology News Updates
    • Sports News Updates
    • World News Updates
  • Forums
  • Blogs
    • Submit Blog Post
    • Latest in Blogs
  • Contact Us

Navigation

  • Blogs
  • Recent posts

User login

  • Create new account
  • Request new password

Current weather

New Delhi / Palam

Broken clouds
  • Broken clouds
  • Temperature: 30 °C
  • Wind: West-Southwest, 5.6 km/h
  • Pressure: 1003 hPa
  • Rel. Humidity: 75 %
  • Visibility: 3.2 km
Reported on:
Sat, 09/04/2010 - 13:00
Home » News articles » 20 Oct 2009 » Monkey drumming may provide insights into origin of music

Monkey drumming may provide insights into origin of music

Submitted by admin on Tue, 10/20/2009 - 04:15

Washington, Oct 19 (ANI): Monkeys drum to communicate messages about power and status - the louder the drumming, the bigger and stronger the animal likely is. However, researchers feel that the behaviour could provide insights into the origin of music.

In the wild, monkeys known as macaques drum by shaking branches or thumping on dead logs and a similar behavior is observed in non-human primates - for instance, gorillas beat their chests and clap their hands, while chimpanzees drum on tree buttresses.

Researchers from the Max Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics in Tübingen, Germany believe that primate drumming might represent a precursor of musical abilities in humans.

Previous studies have found areas of brains associated with vocal communication in monkeys. It hints at the roots of vocal communications in primates.

The discovery of drumming in rhesus macaques offers a way to examine what brain regions were linked with nonvocal communication, such as music in humans.

During the new study, the researchers scanned monkey brains while the rhesus macaques listened to either drumming or monkey calls. They found overlapping networks activated in the temporal lobe, which in humans is key to processing meaning in both speech and vision.

"Humans convey information not only using speech, but also using other sounds that range in diversity from loud hand-clapping as applause, to the discrete knocking on a door before entering, to drumming that forms an important part of music," Live Science quoted Christoph Kayser, a neuroscientist as saying.

"What is common between such sounds is that they are produced by repeated movements of the limbs so as to produce a structured sound made up of a series of periodic repeats, or beats.

Humans use very complicated beat patterns by drumming, often in conjunction with musical rhythms. It is well known that such percussive beat generation is ubiquitous across human cultures, even used by tribal cultures," he added. The fact that vocal and nonvocal communication have common origins in the brain in monkeys could support the notion that both co-evolved "to support the human faculties of language and music," he added.

The study appears in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. (ANI)

  • All articles by admin
Tags:
  • Science & Technology News Updates

Related Posts

Urban green spaces are "essential to humans' wellbeing", claims biologist
Leona Lewis wishes she could forget about red carpets and 'just sing'
Simon Cowell planning lavish £250k party for 50th b'day
1st century A.D. colossal statue of Greek God Apollo unearthed in Turkey
2 mln yr old skulls rewrite history of humankind
Song birds have to deal with cover artists too
Chimps can "catch" yawn from yawning toons
Astronauts could orbit Mars in 2020s, provided NASA's budget is boosted
Brain circuit that controls binge eating uncovered
Scientists give evolutionary explanation for fertility problems

Sponsored Links

Recent News

  • Geelani's efforts to remain in the headlines
  • High-speed graphene transistors could mean faster mobiles, computers
  • Fuel-free space tethers to manoeuvre spacecraft in orbit
  • Queen furious over Tony Blair memoirs
  • Key financial backer of Ground Zero mosque once contributed to 'terror group'
  • 'Nothing sexier' than red lipstick and hot lingerie: Dita Von Teese
  • Ehsan Mani slams PCB, Pak High Commission's role in 'spot-fixing' scandal
  • Owl monkey only primate to exhibit 'early birds' and 'night owls' behaviour
  • How bone-marrow stem cells survive in low-oxygen environments
  • Brit docs remove 12 bras from dog's stomach!
  • Mahatma Gandhi's grandson appeals for international help for flood-ravaged Pak
  • Parkinson's patients 'perform automated tasks better'
  • Most Americans struggle with long-term weight loss: Study
  • Transition metal catalysts led to origin of life?
  • Scientists find culprit behind dying 'doughnut' of Michigan Lake
more
I love Smashing Magazine!
Copyright © 2007-2010, The Info Sage - Latest India, Asia, World News Updates, Breaking, Sports, Lifestyles, Science & Tech, Health, Entertainment and Business News Updates.