Summary: Music can paint similar stories in listeners’ minds, but the degree to which the imagined narratives are shared depends upon the degree to which culture is shared between the listeners.
Source: Princeton University
Are we all imagining the same thing when we listen to music, or are our experiences hopelessly subjective? In other words, is music a truly universal language?
To investigate those questions,ย an international team of researchers (including a classical pianist, a rock drummer and a concert bassist) asked hundreds of people what stories they imagined when listening to instrumental music.
Theย resultsย appeared recently in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
The researchers, led by Princetonโsย Elizabeth Margulisย and Devin McAuley of Michigan State University, discovered that listeners in Michigan and Arkansas imagined very similar scenes, while listeners in China envisioned completely different stories.ย
โThese results paint a more complex picture of musicโs power,โ said Margulis, a professor of musicย who uses theoretical, behavioral and neuroimaging methodologies to investigate the dynamic experience of listeners.
โMusic can generate remarkably similar stories in listenersโ minds, but the degree to which these imagined narratives are shared depends on the degree to which culture is shared across listeners.โ
The 622 participants came from three regions across two continents: two suburban college towns in middle America โ one in Arkansas and the other in Michigan โ and a group from Dimen, a village in rural China where the primary language is Dong, a tonal language not related to Mandarin, and where the residents have little access to Western media.
All three groups of listeners โ in Arkansas, Michigan and Dimen โ heard the same 32 musical stimuli: 60-second snippets of instrumental music, half from Western music and half from Chinese music, all without lyrics. After each musical excerpt, they provided free-response descriptions of the stories they envisioned while they listened.
The results were striking. Listeners in Arkansas and Michigan described very similar stories, often using the same words, while the Dimen listeners envisioned stories that were similar to each other but very different from those of American listeners.
For example, a musical passage identified only as W9 brought to mind a sunrise over a forest, with animals waking and birds chirping for American listeners, while those in Dimen pictured a man blowing a leaf on a mountain, singing a song to his beloved.
Forย musical passage C16, Arkansas and Michigan listeners described a cowboy, sitting alone in the desert sun, looking out over an empty town; participants in Dimen imagined a man in ancient times sorrowfully contemplating the loss of his beloved.
Quantifying similarities between free-response stories required huge amounts of natural language data processing. The tools and strategies that they developed will be useful in future studies, said Margulis, who is also the director of Princetonโs Music Cognition lab.
โBeing able to map out these semantic overlaps, using tools from natural language processing, is exciting and very promising for future studies that, like this one, straddle the border between the humanities and the sciences.โ
โItโs amazing,โ said co-authorย Benjamin Kubit, a drummer and a postdoctoral research associate previously in the Princeton Neuroscience Institute and now in the Department of Music.
โYou can take two random people who grew up in a similar environment, have them listen to a song they havenโt heard before, ask them to imagine a narrative, and youโll find similarities.
“However, if those two people donโt share a culture or geographical location, you wonโt see that same kind of similarity in experience.
“So while we imagine music can bring people together, the opposite can also be trueย โย it can distinguish between sets of people with a different background or culture.โ
Though the researchers had carefully ensured that the pieces they chose had never appeared in a movie soundtrack or any other setting that would prescribe visuals, the same music sparked very similar visuals in hundreds of listeners โ unless they had grown up in a different cultural context.
โItโs stunning to me that some of these visceral, hard-to-articulate, imagined responses we have to music can actually be widely shared,โ said Margulis.
โThereโs something about that thatโs really puzzling and compelling, especially because the way we encounter music in 2022 is often solitary, over headphones. But it turns out, itโs still a shared experience, almost like a shared dream. I find it really surprising and fascinatingย โย with the caveat, of course, that itโs not universally shared, but depends on a common set of cultural experiences.โ
Co-authorย Cara Turnbull, a concert bassist turned graduate student in musicology, said: โItโs just fascinating how much our upbringings shape us as individuals while also giving us enough common experiences that we relate to this media in ways that are simultaneously unique and shared.โ
Funding: This research was supported by the Division of Behavioral and Cognitive Sciences of the National Science Foundation, Award Numbers 1734063 (PI: JDM) and 1734025 (PI: EHM).
About this music and neuroscience research news
Author: Liz Fuller-Wright
Source: Princeton University
Contact: Liz Fuller-Wright – Princeton University
Image: The image is in the public domain
Original Research: Closed access.
“Narratives imagined in response to instrumental music reveal culture-bounded intersubjectivity” by Elizabeth Margulis et al. PNAS
Abstract
Narratives imagined in response to instrumental music reveal culture-bounded intersubjectivity
The scientific literature sometimes considers music an abstract stimulus, devoid of explicit meaning, and at other times considers it a universal language.
Here, individuals in three geographically distinct locations spanning two cultures performed a highly unconstrained task: they provided free-response descriptions of stories they imagined while listening to instrumental music.
Tools from natural language processing revealed that listeners provide highly similar stories to the same musical excerpts when they share an underlying culture, but when they do not, the generated stories show limited overlap.
These results paint a more complex picture of musicโs power: music can generate remarkably similar stories in listenersโ minds, but the degree to which these imagined narratives are shared depends on the degree to which culture is shared across listeners.
Thus, music is neither an abstract stimulus nor a universal language but has semantic affordances shaped by culture, requiring more sustained attention from psychology.


