April 18, 2019 01 h 11 min
April 14, 2005 01 h 01 min
April 14, 2005 24 min
May 12, 2005 52 min
February 4, 2005 01 h 18 min
October 17, 2007 49 min
June 27, 2007 01 h 12 min
July 11, 2007 48 min
September 12, 2007 01 h 07 min
September 19, 2007 01 h 13 min
September 26, 2007 01 h 00 min
October 3, 2007 01 h 12 min
October 10, 2007 01 h 10 min
October 24, 2007 50 min
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Theories of the origins of music claim that the music faculty is shaped by the functional design of the human mind. On these ideas, musical behavior and musical structure are expected to exhibit species-wide regularities: music should be characterized by human universals. Many cognitive and evolutionary scientists intuitively accept this idea but no one has any good evidence for it. Most scholars of music, in contrast, intuitively accept the opposite position, citing the staggering diversity of the world’s music as evidence that music is shaped mostly by culture. I will present two papers that attempt to resolve this debate. The first, a pair of experiments, shows that the musical forms of songs in 86 cultures are shaped by their social functions (Mehr & Singh et al., 2018, Current Biology). The second, a descriptive project, applies tools of computational social science to the recently-created Natural History of Song corpora (http://naturalhistoryofsong.org) to demonstrate universals and dimensions of variation in musical behaviors and musical forms (Mehr et al., working paper, https://psyarxiv.com/emq8r).