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Psychology of Music Learning

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Achievement - specific musical accomplishments often the result of instruction ... Musical Home - critical development periods, expectancies, brain plasticity, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Psychology of Music Learning


1
Psychology of Music Learning
  • Miksza - Spring 08
  • WEEK THIRTEEN
  • MUSICAL ABILITY

2
R B - Definitions
  • Ability - often used as a slippery term
    fluctuating among talent, musicality, capacity,
    aptitude, achievement
  • Finer definitions (see pg. 384-385)
  • Ability - being able to do something, regardless
    of how a person became able
  • Aptitude - potential success prior to specialized
    music learning
  • Capacity - ability that is a result of heredity
    and maturation
  • Achievement - specific musical accomplishments
    often the result of instruction
  • Development - growth and maturation process
  • Learning - observable change in behavior (?)

3
R B - Influences on Ability
  • Hearing acuity - sufficient sensitivity is
    important
  • Genetics - hereditary capacities (although not
    necessarily specific skills), advantageous
    physical characteristics, brain characteristics,
    handedness
  • Musical Home - critical development periods,
    expectancies, brain plasticity, balancing early
    musical experiences at very early ages
  • Physical features - cupids bow example
  • Creativity - an obvious element of composition
    and performance, does not necessarily explain
    musical ability
  • Intelligence - definitional issues, lack of
    relationships with music aptitude measures,
    asymmetric relations, savants as evidence for
    separate abilities
  • Gender and race - stereotypes persist in some
    areas, cultural differences

4
R B - Learning Theory
  • See summaries of Behaviorist and Cognitivist
    approaches to understanding learning

5
R B - Development
  • Innate musical responses
  • Reacting to musical stimuli in utero
  • Cooing and babbling varying in loudness, contour,
    etc.
  • Experiments of infant attendance to stimuli
  • Especially beat and tempo
  • Spontaneous song
  • Replaced by learned song by four
  • Varies with cultural differences
  • Concept of tonality may stabilize around
    five/six years old
  • Notation developing from abstract-iconic-symbolic

6
R B - Abnormalities
  • Amusia - without music - an inability to
    produce or recognize music
  • Often studied in relation to brain trauma
  • For some unrelated to speech and other auditory
    processes
  • Monotonism - singing one tone regardless of
    situation
  • Related to vocal difficulties
  • Synesthesia - simultaneous experiencing a
    stimulus
  • Chromosthesia - blend of color and sound
    perception

7
R B - Measurement
  • Aptitude
  • Seashore Measures of Musical Talents (1919)
  • Pitch, loudness, time, timbre, rhythm patterns,
    tone patterns
  • No total score
  • Wing Standardised Test of Musical Intelligence
    (1954)
  • Melodic, harmonic, rhythm discrimination chord
    analysis, pitch, memory, rhythm, harmony,
    intensity, phrasing
  • One total score
  • Gordon Musical Aptitude Profile (1965)
  • Tonal imagery, rhythmic imagery, musical
    sensitivity
  • One total score
  • PMMA, IMMA, AMMA
  • Later versions of Gordon aptitude approach
  • Based on audiation concept
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