Global musical diversity is largely independent of linguistic and genetic histories

Nature Communications Vol/Iss. 15 (3964) Springer Nature Published In Pages: 1-12
By Passmore, Sam, Wood, Anna L. C., Barbieri, Chiara , Shilton, Dor , Daikoku, Hideo , Atkinson, Quentin D. , Savage, Patrick E.

Abstract

Music is a universal but diverse human trait. Using a dataset of 5,242 songs from 719 societies, this study identifies five major dimensions of musical diversity that show patterned geographic and historical structure. The authors then use these dimensions to ask whether they are related to genetic and linguistic relationships from 121 societies. Musical similarities are found to be only weakly related to language or genetic relationships, with stronger links only in certain regions such as Southeast Asia and sub-Saharan Africa with further analysis showing largely vertical transmission across generations. Overall, global musical traditions appear largely independent from genetic and linguistic histories.

Samples

Sample Used Coded Data Comment
Global JukeboxOther ResearchersCantometric dataset
GeLaToOther ResearchersGenetic data
GlottocodesOther ResearchersLinguistic data

Documents and Hypotheses Filed By:jonathan.zhang