Abstract

Vocal music and spoken language both have important roles in human communication, but it is unclear why these two different modes of vocal communication exist. Although similar, speech and song differ in certain design features. One interesting difference is in the pitch intonation contour, which consists of discrete tones in song, vs. gliding intonation contours in speech. Here, we investigated whether vocal phrases consisting of discrete pitches (song-like) or gliding pitches (speech-like) are remembered better, conducting three studies implementing auditory same-different tasks at three levels of difficulty. We tested two hypotheses: that discrete pitch contours aid auditory memory, independent of musical experience (“song memory advantage hypothesis”), or that the higher everyday experience perceiving and producing speech make speech intonation easier to remember (“experience advantage hypothesis”). We used closely matched stimuli, controlling for rhythm and timbre, and we included a stimulus intermediate between song-like and speech-like pitch contours (with partially gliding and partially discrete pitches). We also assessed participants' musicality to evaluate experience-dependent effects. We found that song-like vocal phrases are remembered better than speech-like vocal phrases, and that intermediate vocal phrases evoked a similar advantage to song-like vocal phrases. Participants with more musical experience were better in remembering all three types of vocal phrases. The precise roles of absolute and relative pitch perception and the influence of top-down vs. bottom-up processing should be clarified in future studies. However, our results suggest that one potential reason for the emergence of discrete pitch–a feature that characterises music across cultures–might be that it enhances auditory memory.

Highlights

  • Human communication is a fundamental behaviour defining how we see ourselves, regarding our apparent uniqueness compared to other species

  • We found that the interaction “Stimulus State:Variant” was significant, that is, participants could memorise both Song and Intermediate stimuli better than Speech stimuli, with the magnitude depending on their Musicality score

  • The results of study 1 are consistent with our hypothesis, showing that the use of discrete pitches in an auditory stimulus modelled after a vocal phrase enhances memory of that stimulus

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Summary

Introduction

Human communication is a fundamental behaviour defining how we see ourselves, regarding our apparent uniqueness compared to other species. Two communicative systems are found in all human cultures, namely language and music, and both have key components executed in the vocal domain. The question of why humans engage in these two modes of vocalisations goes back to Darwin who proposed that they have a common origin (Darwin, 1871). They share the same vocal output system, which might be fundamental to the origin of both systems (see Levinson, 2013).

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