music, the social mind, and language

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Music, the Social Mind, and Language Thirty-first LACUS Forum University of Illinois at Chicago, July 28, 2004 William L. Benzon

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Page 1: Music, the Social Mind, and Language

Music, the Social Mind, and Language

Thirty-first LACUS ForumUniversity of Illinois at Chicago, July 28,

2004

William L. Benzon

Page 2: Music, the Social Mind, and Language

An Exercise in Speculative Engineering

1. Brain-to-Brain Communication2. Neural Life in the World3. Music and Coupled Oscillation4. Collective Decision5. From Synchrony to TOM6. Vygotsky & Development7. Poetry as Musical Language?

Page 3: Music, the Social Mind, and Language

1. Brain-to-Brain Communication:

A Thought Experiment

Page 4: Music, the Social Mind, and Language

Long-Term Storage

CPU

If the brain were a computer . . .

Working RAM

Moving patterns of bits from place to place.

Page 5: Music, the Social Mind, and Language

• Point-to-point connections, end-to-end

• Isolated signal paths• Bit patterns have an identity that is

independent of location in the system

• Locations are labeled (addresses)

Digital Computers

Page 6: Music, the Social Mind, and Language

• “Wire” brain A to brain B directly– neuron to neuron

• Assume physical problems are solved

• Two problems remain– Correspondence– Source identification

Direct Connection

Page 7: Music, the Social Mind, and Language

Correspondence Problem• How do you identify which neuron

in brain A corresponds to which neuron in brain B?

• This is possible for small nervous systems– e.g. C. elegans, 959 cells, 302

neurons • Not possible for large nervous

systems

Page 8: Music, the Social Mind, and Language

Source Identification• How does a neuron distinguish

between native and foreign signals?

• Neural signals do not have source and destination codes.

Page 9: Music, the Social Mind, and Language

Therefore . . . . • Direct communication between

nervous systems would result in incoherent noise.

• Though one can imagine that, in time, people might learn how to interact with specific others through such a channel.

Page 10: Music, the Social Mind, and Language

Questions . . . . • What does this suggest about

interactions between brain regions?

• What does this suggest about the “standard” computer analogy?

• What does this suggest about meaning?

Page 11: Music, the Social Mind, and Language

Reset . . . . • Interpersonal communication

cannot be thought of as sending signals through a wire.– Even if the “wire” consists of millions

upon millions of neurons.

• Let’s start from a beginning . . .

Page 12: Music, the Social Mind, and Language

2. Neural Life in the World

Page 13: Music, the Social Mind, and Language

External World

Neural Net Internal Milieu

Life in Two Worlds

Page 14: Music, the Social Mind, and Language

External World

InternalMilieu

A Simple Animal

Meaning is in relationships.

Lamb, S. M. (1999). Pathways of the Brain. Amsterdam, John Benjamins B. V.

Page 15: Music, the Social Mind, and Language

External World

Fred

Internal Milieu

NS

CNS

Spot Spot

JoanJoan

Self in the World

Fred

Page 16: Music, the Social Mind, and Language

External World

NS

CNS

Spot Spot

JoanJoan

Self and Other

Fred

NS

CNS

Spot

Fred

Joan

Fred

Page 17: Music, the Social Mind, and Language

3. Music and Coupled Oscillation

Page 18: Music, the Social Mind, and Language

Coupled Oscillators• Pendulum clocks (Huygens)

– a purely physical device, no symbols• Fireflies

– mediated, but still no symbols• Self-organizing, no leader

Strogatz, S. H. and I. Stewart (1993). "Coupled Oscillators and Biological Synchronization." Scientific American (December): 102-109.

Page 19: Music, the Social Mind, and Language

Bi-modal Clapping• Hear individually, act collectively• Desynchronized, and loud• Synchronized, not so loud• Two values:

– Enthusiasm for performance– Group solidarity

• No leader

Néda, Z., E. Ravasz, et al. (2000). "The sound of many hands clapping." Nature 403: 849-850.

Page 20: Music, the Social Mind, and Language

Jamming• Things happen• The some things happen again• Group memory

– holophony: Longuet-Higgins• Well-coordinated interaction• No leader necessary

Longuet-Higgins, H. C. (1987). Mental Processes: Studies in Cognitive Science. Cambridge, MA, MIT Press.

Page 21: Music, the Social Mind, and Language

Musicking Creates Social Space

• The group of individuals are closely coordinated in a common activity.

• They become a coherent individual actor.

• As far as we know, apes do not synchronize.

Benzon, W. L. (2001). Beethoven's Anvil: Music in Mind and Culture. New York, Basic Books.McNeill, W. H. (1995). Keeping Together in Time: Dance and Drill in Human History. Cambridge, Harvard University Press.

Page 22: Music, the Social Mind, and Language

4. Collective Decision

Page 23: Music, the Social Mind, and Language

Baboon Travel: Their Problem• Where does the troop move next?• Each has some preference.• They all know the territory, more

or less.• How do they coordinate their

preferences and knowledge?

Page 24: Music, the Social Mind, and Language

The Problem

?World

Geoffrey

Terence

X

X

Page 25: Music, the Social Mind, and Language

Hans Kummer: • Younger adult males and their

groups at periphery.• Pseudopods protrude and withdraw

again.– male faces in some direction

• Older male from center of the troop struts toward one of the pseudopods.

• The troop moves out.

Baboon Travel: Solution

Kummer, H. (1971). Primate Societies: Group Techniques of Ecological Adaptation. Chicago, Aldine • Atherton.

Page 26: Music, the Social Mind, and Language

?What are They Doing?

Troop

X

X

X

X

X

X

X

X

Page 27: Music, the Social Mind, and Language

5. From Synchrony to “Theory of Mind”

Page 28: Music, the Social Mind, and Language

Interaction Synchrony• William Condon• Films of people interacting

– adults and adults– neonate and adult

• Neonate’s body movements track adult voice.– very slight phase lag

Condon, W. S. (1986). Communication: Rhythm and Structure. Rhythm in Psychological. in Linguistic and Musical Processes. J. R. Evans and M. Clynes, eds. Springfield, Illinois, Charles C Thomas • Publisher: 55-78.

Page 29: Music, the Social Mind, and Language

Synchrony = Society• Autistics and others have trouble

with synchrony.• Does synchrony have any function

or is it just some arbitrary characteristic of interacting humans?– We don’t know– But . . . .

Page 30: Music, the Social Mind, and Language

Possible Value of Synchrony• Segment the speech signal

– where are the boundaries?• Read faces (TOM)

– people are in relative motion– visual system moves as well– synchrony eliminates one factor from

this relative motion

Page 31: Music, the Social Mind, and Language

Synchrony & “TOM”• TOM not a theory in any robust

sense– inference beyond the information

given

• Synchrony ≠ TOM

• Synchrony as enabling condition for TOMBaron-Cohen, S. (1995). Mindblindness. Cambridge, MA, MIT Press.

Page 32: Music, the Social Mind, and Language

Parkinson’s & Synchrony• Disorder of Motor Control

– dopamine deficiency• Music helps Parkinsonians• Even late stage

– immobile patients become mobile by synchronizing with music or with others

Sacks, O. (1990) Awakenings. New York, HarperPerennial.

Page 33: Music, the Social Mind, and Language

Interactional synchrony binds ego and alter into a single intentional system.

Just as musicking makes a group of individuals into a coheren individual.

Page 34: Music, the Social Mind, and Language

6. Vygotsky & Development

Vygotsky, L. S. (1962). Thought and Language. Cambridge, Massachusetts, MIT Press.

Page 35: Music, the Social Mind, and Language

External World

child

Internal Milieu

NS

CNS

blanket blanket

Child

mommom

World and Nervous System

Page 36: Music, the Social Mind, and Language

Inner and Outer• Signals flow from point to point• The route can be entirely inside

the nervous system• Or it can travel through the

external world• Thus we might have:

– FUNCTIONALLY inside– PHYSICALLY outside

Page 37: Music, the Social Mind, and Language

Physical World

CNSblanket

Child

CNSblanket

Mother

Ablanky

Ablankyspeak hear

Rblankyhear

mom

blanket

“blanky”

mom

Mother-Directed

Bloom, P. (2000). How Children Learn the Meanings of Words. Cambridge, MIT Press.

Page 38: Music, the Social Mind, and Language

Physical World

CNSblanket

Child

Ablanky

speakhear

Rblanky

blanket

“blanky”

Child-Directed

Page 39: Music, the Social Mind, and Language

Physical World

CNS

blanketblanket

Child

Ablanky

Rblanky

Inner-Speech

Page 40: Music, the Social Mind, and Language

Now we can “walk” in one another’s

cortex.

Page 41: Music, the Social Mind, and Language

7. Poetry as Musical Language

Page 42: Music, the Social Mind, and Language

Constituency in “Lime-Tree Bower”

1

2

3

4

5 1.1111.1121.1211.1221.1231.2111.2121.221 2.1112.1122.1212.1222.1232.21 2.22

1.11 1.12 1.21 1.22

1.222

2.11 2.12

2.21.1 1.2 2.1

1 2

LTB

beginning end

Benzon, W. L. (2004). Talking to Nature in “This Lime-Tree Bower My Prison. Unpublished ms.

Page 43: Music, the Social Mind, and Language

Lines and Constituentstopic

subtopicsubtopic

line line line line

topic

subtopicsubtopic

line line line line

CONSISTENT

INCONSISTENT

Page 44: Music, the Social Mind, and Language

Constituents in “Kubla Khan”

KK

1

1.31.21.1

1.211.221.23 1.311.321.111.12

2

2.2

2.212.222.23

2.1

2.112.12

2.3

2.312.32

fountain sunny pleasure domecaves of ice

Paradise

Benzon, W. L. (2003)."Kubla Khan" and the Embodied Mind, PsyArt: A Hyperlink Journal for the Psychological Study of the Arts, November 29, 2003, URL: http://www.clas.ufl.edu/ipsa/journal/2003/benzon02.htm

Page 45: Music, the Social Mind, and Language

Rhyme in “Kubla Khan”And from this chasm, with ceaseless turmoil seethingAs if this earth in fast thick pants were breathing,A mighty fountain momently was forced:

GGH

171819

Amid whose swift half-intermitted burstHuge fragments vaulted like rebounding hail,

Of chaffy grain beneath the thresher's flail:

HII

202122

And 'mid these dancing rocks at once and everIt flung up momently the sacred river.

FF

2324

Page 46: Music, the Social Mind, and Language

Perhaps . . . .• Poetry externalizes the sound of

language so that it becomes a surrogate for the external world.

• LTB is organized so as to emphasize continuity of narrative consciousness.

• Rhyme in KK introduces an element of predictability into the poetic act in compensation for its lack of narrative.

Page 47: Music, the Social Mind, and Language

Shareability• Jakobson on the poetic function of

language • Bateson: redundancy in primitive

art• Freeman: neural “alignment” during

ritual

Jakobson, R. (1960). Linguistics and Poetics. Style in Language. T. Sebeok. Cambridge, MIT Press: 350-377.

Bateson, G. (1972). Steps To An Ecology of Mind. New York, Ballentine Books.Freeman, W. J. (2000). A Neurobiological Role of Music in Social Bonding. The Origins of Music. N. L. Wallin, B. Merker and S. Brown. Cambridge, MA, MIT Press: 411-424

Page 48: Music, the Social Mind, and Language

Neural Alignment

Page 49: Music, the Social Mind, and Language

One-Liner

• The music IN language creates the social space through which people coordinate meanings and intentions THROUGH language.

Page 50: Music, the Social Mind, and Language

the end