Re: AP in all of us? New evidence from speech research (Martin Braun )


Subject: Re: AP in all of us? New evidence from speech research
From:    Martin Braun  <nombraun(at)POST.NETLINK.SE>
Date:    Wed, 9 May 2001 11:34:22 +0200

Rebecca, wouldn't you think that any pitch memory in the motor systems of the voice, if it does exist, must have been mediated via the auditory system? Martin ----- Original Message ----- From: Rebecca Mercuri <mercuri(at)gradient.cis.upenn.edu> To: <nombraun(at)POST.NETLINK.SE> Cc: <AUDITORY(at)LISTS.MCGILL.CA>; <mercuri(at)gradient.cis.upenn.edu> Sent: Tuesday, May 08, 2001 5:08 PM Subject: Re: AP in all of us? New evidence from speech research > In the days when there used to be more "jingle" type ads on TV, > if you asked a kid to sing the commercial, they'd typically sing > it on or very close to the original pitch the ad was in. I recall > some years ago reading or hearing about a study where the popular > acapella baseball songs (ones not prompted by the stadium organist) > were surveyed and folks around the US sang those at the same pitch > as well. > > My personal theory is that it's a physical memory -- song singing > involves the muscles (or whatever they are) in the throat/larynx > and there's probably some feedback that provides a form of pitch > memory as in "that feels like the comfortable singing pitch I > know for that song." Anyone know of any work on that angle? > > Rebecca Mercuri, Ph.D. > >


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