open access publication

Article, 2023

Worlds apart? Testing the cultural distance hypothesis in music perception of Chinese and Western listeners

Cognition, ISSN 0010-0277, Volume 235, 10.1016/j.cognition.2023.105405

Contributors

Klarlund M. (Corresponding author) [1] [2] [3] Brattico E. 0000-0003-0676-6464 [1] [4] Pearce M.T. 0000-0002-1282-431X [1] [5] Wu Y. [2] [3] Vuust P. 0000-0002-4908-735X [1] Overgaard M. 0000-0002-1215-5355 [6] Du Y. (Corresponding author) [2] [3] [7]

Affiliations

  1. [1] Center for Music in the Brain
  2. [NORA names: The Royal Academy of Music - Aarhus/Aalborg; Artistic Higher Education Institutions; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD];
  3. [2] Institute of Psychology
  4. [NORA names: China; Asia, East];
  5. [3] University of Chinese Academy of Sciences
  6. [NORA names: China; Asia, East];
  7. [4] University of Bari
  8. [NORA names: Italy; Europe, EU; OECD];
  9. [5] Queen Mary University of London
  10. [NORA names: United Kingdom; Europe, Non-EU; OECD];

Abstract

According to the cultural distance hypothesis (CDH), individuals learn culture-specific statistical structures in music as internal stylistic models and use these models in predictive processing of music, with musical structures closer to their home culture being easier to predict. This cultural distance effect may be affected by domain-specific (musical ability) and domain-general individual characteristics (openness, implicit cultural bias). To test the CDH and its modulation by individual characteristics, we recruited Chinese and Western adults to categorize stylistically ambiguous and unambiguous Chinese and Western melodies by cultural origin. Categorization performance was better for unambiguous (low CD) than ambiguous melodies (high CD), and for in-culture melodies regardless of ambiguity for both groups, providing evidence for CDH. Musical ability, but not other traits, correlated positively with melody categorization, suggesting that musical ability refines internal stylistic models. Therefore, both cultures show musical enculturation in their home culture with a modulatory effect of individual musical ability.

Keywords

Cultural distance, Enculturation, Music perception, Predictive coding

Funders

  • Chinese Academy of Sciences
  • Danmarks Grundforskningsfond

Data Provider: Elsevier