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THE MUSIC LAB
NHS Discography contains transcriptions and analyses of 118 field recordings from the 30 world regions covered in NHS Ethnography. The songs represent four common social contexts: lullaby, love, dance, and healing. We selected recordings by reviewing published collections of world music, digitizing out-of-print recordings, and contacting anthropologists and ethnomusicologists to obtainTHE MUSIC LAB
We do citizen science to learn how the human mind creates and perceives music.Pick a game to get started! We recommend wearing headphones but you can also play while listening on speakers. Please feel free to send us feedback about your experience.THE MUSIC LAB
Infants relax in response to unfamiliar foreign lullabies . When we played songs from around the world to infants, we found that infants relax more in response to lullabies compared to other song types in the Natural History of Song (NHS) Discography - dance, healing, and love songs. Below you can explore the songs we used in this study; to learn more about our results, check out our paper inTONE-DEAFNESS TEST
Do you think you're tone-deaf? Test your pitch perception.THE MUSIC LAB
NHS Interactive Visualizations. On this page you can view the interactive visualizations for Universality and diversity in human song (Mehr et al., 2019, Science). If you do not have access to papers in Science, you can view the preprint of this article instead.. Clickone
THE MUSIC LAB
We do citizen science to learn how the human mind creates andperceives music.
WHO'S LISTENING?
Listen to voices from around the world and guess who's listening.WORLD MUSIC QUIZ
Can you tell what kind of song you're listening to? WHAT'S YOUR MUSICAL STYLE? Teach our robot how music feels! He'll guess your favorite songs. TEST YOUR MUSICAL IQ Are you a musical prodigy? Find out now.THE MUSIC LAB
NHS Discography contains transcriptions and analyses of 118 field recordings from the 30 world regions covered in NHS Ethnography. The songs represent four common social contexts: lullaby, love, dance, and healing. We selected recordings by reviewing published collections of world music, digitizing out-of-print recordings, and contacting anthropologists and ethnomusicologists to obtainTHE MUSIC LAB
We do citizen science to learn how the human mind creates and perceives music.Pick a game to get started! We recommend wearing headphones but you can also play while listening on speakers. Please feel free to send us feedback about your experience.THE MUSIC LAB
Infants relax in response to unfamiliar foreign lullabies . When we played songs from around the world to infants, we found that infants relax more in response to lullabies compared to other song types in the Natural History of Song (NHS) Discography - dance, healing, and love songs. Below you can explore the songs we used in this study; to learn more about our results, check out our paper inTONE-DEAFNESS TEST
Do you think you're tone-deaf? Test your pitch perception.THE MUSIC LAB
NHS Interactive Visualizations. On this page you can view the interactive visualizations for Universality and diversity in human song (Mehr et al., 2019, Science). If you do not have access to papers in Science, you can view the preprint of this article instead.. Clickone
THE MUSIC LAB
We do citizen science to learn how the human mind creates andperceives music.
WHO'S LISTENING?
Listen to voices from around the world and guess who's listening.WORLD MUSIC QUIZ
Can you tell what kind of song you're listening to? WHAT'S YOUR MUSICAL STYLE? Teach our robot how music feels! He'll guess your favorite songs.THE MUSIC LAB
NHS Discography contains transcriptions and analyses of 118 field recordings from the 30 world regions covered in NHS Ethnography. The songs represent four common social contexts: lullaby, love, dance, and healing. We selected recordings by reviewing published collections of world music, digitizing out-of-print recordings, and contacting anthropologists and ethnomusicologists to obtainTHE MUSIC LAB
Infants relax in response to unfamiliar foreign lullabies . When we played songs from around the world to infants, we found that infants relax more in response to lullabies compared to other song types in the Natural History of Song (NHS) Discography - dance, healing, and love songs. Below you can explore the songs we used in this study; to learn more about our results, check out our paper inWORLD MUSIC QUIZ
Can you tell what kind of song you're listening to? WHAT'S YOUR MUSICAL STYLE? Teach our robot how music feels! He'll guess your favorite songs. INTERACTIVE ETHNOGRAPHY PLOT This interactive plot shows descriptions of singing behavior from NHS Ethnography along three dimensions: formality, affect, and religiosity. Each point represents a ethnographic description ofsinging.
KIDS' MUSIC QUIZ!
How do kids interpret world music? This game works best on a desktopcomputer.
INTERACTIVE DISCOGRAPHY PLOT This interactive plot shows the songs of NHS Discography along two dimensions: melodic complexity (PC1, the x-axis) and rhythmic complexity (PC2, the y-axis).THE MUSIC LAB
Mila is a psychology graduate of Glasgow University, where she worked with social robot facial expressions. After a 15 year-long stint in Luxembourg, Scotland, and Spain, and having survived the British ABRSM classical piano exams, she's returned to her birth city of Boston to research what it is about human evolution and culture that has made us so responsive to organized sound. THE MUSIC LABTEST YOUR MUSICAL IQINTERACTIVE VISUALIZATIONSNHSLEAVEFEEDBACK
Visit the Music Lab with your baby! We are now recruiting babies age 2 to 12 months for science research about the world's music. In the study, babies listen to songs while we measure their heart rate, pupil dilation, gaze, motion, and more! We are conveniently located on Harvard's Cambridge campus, with free parking, and you can take home aTHE MUSIC LAB
This provides a public resource to advance the scientific and humanistic study of music. Music is a signature of the human experience. A ubiquitous, ancient, and uniquely human activity, music, and especially song, appears in most human cultures with staggering diversity. But two fundamental questions — whether there is underlying structure TEST YOUR MUSICAL IQ Are you a musical prodigy? Find out now.THE MUSIC LAB
Infants relax in response to unfamiliar foreign lullabies . When we played songs from around the world to infants, we found that infants relax more in response to lullabies compared to other song types in the Natural History of Song (NHS) Discography - dance, healing, and love songs. Below you can explore the songs we used in this study; to learn more about our results, check out our paper inTONE-DEAFNESS TEST
Do you think you're tone-deaf? Test your pitch perception.THE MUSIC LAB
We do citizen science to learn how the human mind creates andperceives music.
WHO'S LISTENING?
Listen to voices from around the world and guess who's listening.WORLD MUSIC QUIZ
Can you tell what kind of song you're listening to?TOP OF THE CHARTS
What songs does the whole world know? Help us find out. WHAT'S YOUR MUSICAL STYLE? Teach our robot how music feels! He'll guess your favorite songs. THE MUSIC LABTEST YOUR MUSICAL IQINTERACTIVE VISUALIZATIONSNHSLEAVEFEEDBACK
Visit the Music Lab with your baby! We are now recruiting babies age 2 to 12 months for science research about the world's music. In the study, babies listen to songs while we measure their heart rate, pupil dilation, gaze, motion, and more! We are conveniently located on Harvard's Cambridge campus, with free parking, and you can take home aTHE MUSIC LAB
This provides a public resource to advance the scientific and humanistic study of music. Music is a signature of the human experience. A ubiquitous, ancient, and uniquely human activity, music, and especially song, appears in most human cultures with staggering diversity. But two fundamental questions — whether there is underlying structure TEST YOUR MUSICAL IQ Are you a musical prodigy? Find out now.THE MUSIC LAB
Infants relax in response to unfamiliar foreign lullabies . When we played songs from around the world to infants, we found that infants relax more in response to lullabies compared to other song types in the Natural History of Song (NHS) Discography - dance, healing, and love songs. Below you can explore the songs we used in this study; to learn more about our results, check out our paper inTONE-DEAFNESS TEST
Do you think you're tone-deaf? Test your pitch perception.THE MUSIC LAB
We do citizen science to learn how the human mind creates andperceives music.
WHO'S LISTENING?
Listen to voices from around the world and guess who's listening.WORLD MUSIC QUIZ
Can you tell what kind of song you're listening to?TOP OF THE CHARTS
What songs does the whole world know? Help us find out. WHAT'S YOUR MUSICAL STYLE? Teach our robot how music feels! He'll guess your favorite songs.THE MUSIC LAB
NHS Discography contains transcriptions and analyses of 118 field recordings from the 30 world regions covered in NHS Ethnography. The songs represent four common social contexts: lullaby, love, dance, and healing. We selected recordings by reviewing published collections of world music, digitizing out-of-print recordings, and contacting anthropologists and ethnomusicologists to obtainTHE MUSIC LAB
Infants relax in response to unfamiliar foreign lullabies . When we played songs from around the world to infants, we found that infants relax more in response to lullabies compared to other song types in the Natural History of Song (NHS) Discography - dance, healing, and love songs. Below you can explore the songs we used in this study; to learn more about our results, check out our paper inTONE-DEAFNESS TEST
Do you think you're tone-deaf? Test your pitch perception. WHAT'S YOUR MUSICAL STYLE? Teach our robot how music feels! He'll guess your favorite songs.THE MUSIC LAB
Mila is a psychology graduate of Glasgow University, where she worked with social robot facial expressions. After a 15 year-long stint in Luxembourg, Scotland, and Spain, and having survived the British ABRSM classical piano exams, she's returned to her birth city of Boston to research what it is about human evolution and culture that has made us so responsive to organized sound.THE MUSIC LAB
NHS Interactive Visualizations. On this page you can view the interactive visualizations for Universality and diversity in human song (Mehr et al., 2019, Science). If you do not have access to papers in Science, you can view the preprint of this article instead.. Clickone
INTERACTIVE DISCOGRAPHY PLOT This interactive plot shows the songs of NHS Discography along two dimensions: melodic complexity (PC1, the x-axis) and rhythmic complexity (PC2, the y-axis). INTERACTIVE ETHNOGRAPHY PLOT This interactive plot shows descriptions of singing behavior from NHS Ethnography along three dimensions: formality, affect, and religiosity. Each point represents a ethnographic description ofsinging.
THE MUSIC LAB
This provides a public resource to advance the scientific and humanistic study of music. Music is a signature of the human experience. A ubiquitous, ancient, and uniquely human activity, music, and especially song, appears in most human cultures with staggering diversity. But two fundamental questions — whether there is underlying structureTHE MUSIC LAB
Visit the Music Lab with your baby! We are now recruiting babies age 2 to 12 months for science research about the world's music. In the study, babies listen to songs while we measure their heart rate, pupil dilation, gaze, motion, and more! We are conveniently located on Harvard's Cambridge campus, with free parking, and you can take home a TEST YOUR MUSICAL IQ Are you a musical prodigy? Find out now.THE MUSIC LAB
Infants relax in response to unfamiliar foreign lullabies . When we played songs from around the world to infants, we found that infants relax more in response to lullabies compared to other song types in the Natural History of Song (NHS) Discography - dance, healing, and love songs. Below you can explore the songs we used in this study; to learn more about our results, check out our paper inTONE-DEAFNESS TEST
Do you think you're tone-deaf? Test your pitch perception.THE MUSIC LAB
We do citizen science to learn how the human mind creates andperceives music.
WHO'S LISTENING?
Listen to voices from around the world and guess who's listening.WORLD MUSIC QUIZ
Can you tell what kind of song you're listening to?SYNTHESIZER GAME
Help us to discover the building blocks of music. WHAT'S YOUR MUSICAL STYLE? Teach our robot how music feels! He'll guess your favorite songs.THE MUSIC LAB
This provides a public resource to advance the scientific and humanistic study of music. Music is a signature of the human experience. A ubiquitous, ancient, and uniquely human activity, music, and especially song, appears in most human cultures with staggering diversity. But two fundamental questions — whether there is underlying structureTHE MUSIC LAB
Visit the Music Lab with your baby! We are now recruiting babies age 2 to 12 months for science research about the world's music. In the study, babies listen to songs while we measure their heart rate, pupil dilation, gaze, motion, and more! We are conveniently located on Harvard's Cambridge campus, with free parking, and you can take home a TEST YOUR MUSICAL IQ Are you a musical prodigy? Find out now.THE MUSIC LAB
Infants relax in response to unfamiliar foreign lullabies . When we played songs from around the world to infants, we found that infants relax more in response to lullabies compared to other song types in the Natural History of Song (NHS) Discography - dance, healing, and love songs. Below you can explore the songs we used in this study; to learn more about our results, check out our paper inTONE-DEAFNESS TEST
Do you think you're tone-deaf? Test your pitch perception.THE MUSIC LAB
We do citizen science to learn how the human mind creates andperceives music.
WHO'S LISTENING?
Listen to voices from around the world and guess who's listening.WORLD MUSIC QUIZ
Can you tell what kind of song you're listening to?SYNTHESIZER GAME
Help us to discover the building blocks of music. WHAT'S YOUR MUSICAL STYLE? Teach our robot how music feels! He'll guess your favorite songs.THE MUSIC LAB
Visit the Music Lab with your baby! We are now recruiting babies age 2 to 12 months for science research about the world's music. In the study, babies listen to songs while we measure their heart rate, pupil dilation, gaze, motion, and more! We are conveniently located on Harvard's Cambridge campus, with free parking, and you can take home aTHE MUSIC LAB
NHS Discography contains transcriptions and analyses of 118 field recordings from the 30 world regions covered in NHS Ethnography. The songs represent four common social contexts: lullaby, love, dance, and healing. We selected recordings by reviewing published collections of world music, digitizing out-of-print recordings, and contacting anthropologists and ethnomusicologists to obtainTHE MUSIC LAB
Infants relax in response to unfamiliar foreign lullabies . When we played songs from around the world to infants, we found that infants relax more in response to lullabies compared to other song types in the Natural History of Song (NHS) Discography - dance, healing, and love songs. Below you can explore the songs we used in this study; to learn more about our results, check out our paper in WHAT'S YOUR MUSICAL STYLE? Teach our robot how music feels! He'll guess your favorite songs.THE MUSIC LAB
Mila is a psychology graduate of Glasgow University, where she worked with social robot facial expressions. After a 15 year-long stint in Luxembourg, Scotland, and Spain, and having survived the British ABRSM classical piano exams, she's returned to her birth city of Boston to research what it is about human evolution and culture that has made us so responsive to organized sound.THE MUSIC LAB
NHS Interactive Visualizations. On this page you can view the interactive visualizations for Universality and diversity in human song (Mehr et al., 2019, Science). If you do not have access to papers in Science, you can view the preprint of this article instead.. Clickone
INTERACTIVE ETHNOGRAPHY PLOT This interactive plot shows descriptions of singing behavior from NHS Ethnography along three dimensions: formality, affect, and religiosity. Each point represents a ethnographic description ofsinging.
INTERACTIVE DISCOGRAPHY PLOT This interactive plot shows the songs of NHS Discography along two dimensions: melodic complexity (PC1, the x-axis) and rhythmic complexity (PC2, the y-axis).THE MUSIC LAB
This provides a public resource to advance the scientific and humanistic study of music. Music is a signature of the human experience. A ubiquitous, ancient, and uniquely human activity, music, and especially song, appears in most human cultures with staggering diversity. But two fundamental questions — whether there is underlying structureTHE MUSIC LAB
Visit the Music Lab with your baby! We are now recruiting babies age 2 to 12 months for science research about the world's music. In the study, babies listen to songs while we measure their heart rate, pupil dilation, gaze, motion, and more! We are conveniently located on Harvard's Cambridge campus, with free parking, and you can take home a TEST YOUR MUSICAL IQ Are you a musical prodigy? Find out now.THE MUSIC LAB
Infants relax in response to unfamiliar foreign lullabies . When we played songs from around the world to infants, we found that infants relax more in response to lullabies compared to other song types in the Natural History of Song (NHS) Discography - dance, healing, and love songs. Below you can explore the songs we used in this study; to learn more about our results, check out our paper inTONE-DEAFNESS TEST
Do you think you're tone-deaf? Test your pitch perception.THE MUSIC LAB
We do citizen science to learn how the human mind creates andperceives music.
WHO'S LISTENING?
Listen to voices from around the world and guess who's listening.WORLD MUSIC QUIZ
Can you tell what kind of song you're listening to?SYNTHESIZER GAME
Help us to discover the building blocks of music. WHAT'S YOUR MUSICAL STYLE? Teach our robot how music feels! He'll guess your favorite songs.THE MUSIC LAB
This provides a public resource to advance the scientific and humanistic study of music. Music is a signature of the human experience. A ubiquitous, ancient, and uniquely human activity, music, and especially song, appears in most human cultures with staggering diversity. But two fundamental questions — whether there is underlying structureTHE MUSIC LAB
Visit the Music Lab with your baby! We are now recruiting babies age 2 to 12 months for science research about the world's music. In the study, babies listen to songs while we measure their heart rate, pupil dilation, gaze, motion, and more! We are conveniently located on Harvard's Cambridge campus, with free parking, and you can take home a TEST YOUR MUSICAL IQ Are you a musical prodigy? Find out now.THE MUSIC LAB
Infants relax in response to unfamiliar foreign lullabies . When we played songs from around the world to infants, we found that infants relax more in response to lullabies compared to other song types in the Natural History of Song (NHS) Discography - dance, healing, and love songs. Below you can explore the songs we used in this study; to learn more about our results, check out our paper inTONE-DEAFNESS TEST
Do you think you're tone-deaf? Test your pitch perception.THE MUSIC LAB
We do citizen science to learn how the human mind creates andperceives music.
WHO'S LISTENING?
Listen to voices from around the world and guess who's listening.WORLD MUSIC QUIZ
Can you tell what kind of song you're listening to?SYNTHESIZER GAME
Help us to discover the building blocks of music. WHAT'S YOUR MUSICAL STYLE? Teach our robot how music feels! He'll guess your favorite songs.THE MUSIC LAB
Visit the Music Lab with your baby! We are now recruiting babies age 2 to 12 months for science research about the world's music. In the study, babies listen to songs while we measure their heart rate, pupil dilation, gaze, motion, and more! We are conveniently located on Harvard's Cambridge campus, with free parking, and you can take home aTHE MUSIC LAB
NHS Discography contains transcriptions and analyses of 118 field recordings from the 30 world regions covered in NHS Ethnography. The songs represent four common social contexts: lullaby, love, dance, and healing. We selected recordings by reviewing published collections of world music, digitizing out-of-print recordings, and contacting anthropologists and ethnomusicologists to obtainTHE MUSIC LAB
Infants relax in response to unfamiliar foreign lullabies . When we played songs from around the world to infants, we found that infants relax more in response to lullabies compared to other song types in the Natural History of Song (NHS) Discography - dance, healing, and love songs. Below you can explore the songs we used in this study; to learn more about our results, check out our paper in WHAT'S YOUR MUSICAL STYLE? Teach our robot how music feels! He'll guess your favorite songs.THE MUSIC LAB
Mila is a psychology graduate of Glasgow University, where she worked with social robot facial expressions. After a 15 year-long stint in Luxembourg, Scotland, and Spain, and having survived the British ABRSM classical piano exams, she's returned to her birth city of Boston to research what it is about human evolution and culture that has made us so responsive to organized sound.THE MUSIC LAB
NHS Interactive Visualizations. On this page you can view the interactive visualizations for Universality and diversity in human song (Mehr et al., 2019, Science). If you do not have access to papers in Science, you can view the preprint of this article instead.. Clickone
INTERACTIVE ETHNOGRAPHY PLOT This interactive plot shows descriptions of singing behavior from NHS Ethnography along three dimensions: formality, affect, and religiosity. Each point represents a ethnographic description ofsinging.
INTERACTIVE DISCOGRAPHY PLOT This interactive plot shows the songs of NHS Discography along two dimensions: melodic complexity (PC1, the x-axis) and rhythmic complexity (PC2, the y-axis).THE MUSIC LAB
This provides a public resource to advance the scientific and humanistic study of music. Music is a signature of the human experience. A ubiquitous, ancient, and uniquely human activity, music, and especially song, appears in most human cultures with staggering diversity. But two fundamental questions — whether there is underlying structureTHE MUSIC LAB
Visit the Music Lab with your baby! We are now recruiting babies age 2 to 12 months for science research about the world's music. In the study, babies listen to songs while we measure their heart rate, pupil dilation, gaze, motion, and more! We are conveniently located on Harvard's Cambridge campus, with free parking, and you can take home a TEST YOUR MUSICAL IQ Are you a musical prodigy? Find out now.THE MUSIC LAB
Infants relax in response to unfamiliar foreign lullabies . When we played songs from around the world to infants, we found that infants relax more in response to lullabies compared to other song types in the Natural History of Song (NHS) Discography - dance, healing, and love songs. Below you can explore the songs we used in this study; to learn more about our results, check out our paper inTONE-DEAFNESS TEST
Do you think you're tone-deaf? Test your pitch perception.THE MUSIC LAB
We do citizen science to learn how the human mind creates andperceives music.
WHO'S LISTENING?
Listen to voices from around the world and guess who's listening.WORLD MUSIC QUIZ
Can you tell what kind of song you're listening to?SYNTHESIZER GAME
Help us to discover the building blocks of music. WHAT'S YOUR MUSICAL STYLE? Teach our robot how music feels! He'll guess your favorite songs.THE MUSIC LAB
This provides a public resource to advance the scientific and humanistic study of music. Music is a signature of the human experience. A ubiquitous, ancient, and uniquely human activity, music, and especially song, appears in most human cultures with staggering diversity. But two fundamental questions — whether there is underlying structureTHE MUSIC LAB
Visit the Music Lab with your baby! We are now recruiting babies age 2 to 12 months for science research about the world's music. In the study, babies listen to songs while we measure their heart rate, pupil dilation, gaze, motion, and more! We are conveniently located on Harvard's Cambridge campus, with free parking, and you can take home a TEST YOUR MUSICAL IQ Are you a musical prodigy? Find out now.THE MUSIC LAB
Infants relax in response to unfamiliar foreign lullabies . When we played songs from around the world to infants, we found that infants relax more in response to lullabies compared to other song types in the Natural History of Song (NHS) Discography - dance, healing, and love songs. Below you can explore the songs we used in this study; to learn more about our results, check out our paper inTONE-DEAFNESS TEST
Do you think you're tone-deaf? Test your pitch perception.THE MUSIC LAB
We do citizen science to learn how the human mind creates andperceives music.
WHO'S LISTENING?
Listen to voices from around the world and guess who's listening.WORLD MUSIC QUIZ
Can you tell what kind of song you're listening to?SYNTHESIZER GAME
Help us to discover the building blocks of music. WHAT'S YOUR MUSICAL STYLE? Teach our robot how music feels! He'll guess your favorite songs.THE MUSIC LAB
Visit the Music Lab with your baby! We are now recruiting babies age 2 to 12 months for science research about the world's music. In the study, babies listen to songs while we measure their heart rate, pupil dilation, gaze, motion, and more! We are conveniently located on Harvard's Cambridge campus, with free parking, and you can take home aTHE MUSIC LAB
NHS Discography contains transcriptions and analyses of 118 field recordings from the 30 world regions covered in NHS Ethnography. The songs represent four common social contexts: lullaby, love, dance, and healing. We selected recordings by reviewing published collections of world music, digitizing out-of-print recordings, and contacting anthropologists and ethnomusicologists to obtainTHE MUSIC LAB
Infants relax in response to unfamiliar foreign lullabies . When we played songs from around the world to infants, we found that infants relax more in response to lullabies compared to other song types in the Natural History of Song (NHS) Discography - dance, healing, and love songs. Below you can explore the songs we used in this study; to learn more about our results, check out our paper in WHAT'S YOUR MUSICAL STYLE? Teach our robot how music feels! He'll guess your favorite songs.THE MUSIC LAB
Mila is a psychology graduate of Glasgow University, where she worked with social robot facial expressions. After a 15 year-long stint in Luxembourg, Scotland, and Spain, and having survived the British ABRSM classical piano exams, she's returned to her birth city of Boston to research what it is about human evolution and culture that has made us so responsive to organized sound.THE MUSIC LAB
NHS Interactive Visualizations. On this page you can view the interactive visualizations for Universality and diversity in human song (Mehr et al., 2019, Science). If you do not have access to papers in Science, you can view the preprint of this article instead.. Clickone
INTERACTIVE ETHNOGRAPHY PLOT This interactive plot shows descriptions of singing behavior from NHS Ethnography along three dimensions: formality, affect, and religiosity. Each point represents a ethnographic description ofsinging.
INTERACTIVE DISCOGRAPHY PLOT This interactive plot shows the songs of NHS Discography along two dimensions: melodic complexity (PC1, the x-axis) and rhythmic complexity (PC2, the y-axis).THE MUSIC LAB
Visit the Music Lab with your baby! We are now recruiting babies age 2 to 12 months for science research about the world's music. In the study, babies listen to songs while we measure their heart rate, pupil dilation, gaze, motion, and more! We are conveniently located on Harvard's Cambridge campus, with free parking, and you can take home a TEST YOUR MUSICAL IQ Are you a musical prodigy? Find out now.THE MUSIC LAB
This provides a public resource to advance the scientific and humanistic study of music. Music is a signature of the human experience. A ubiquitous, ancient, and uniquely human activity, music, and especially song, appears in most human cultures with staggering diversity. But two fundamental questions — whether there is underlying structureTHE MUSIC LAB
Infants relax in response to unfamiliar foreign lullabies . When we played songs from around the world to infants, we found that infants relax more in response to lullabies compared to other song types in the Natural History of Song (NHS) Discography - dance, healing, and love songs. Below you can explore the songs we used in this study; to learn more about our results, check out our paper inTHE MUSIC LAB
We do citizen science to learn how the human mind creates and perceives music.Pick a game to get started! We recommend wearing headphones but you can also play while listening on speakers. Please feel free to send us feedback about your experience.THE MUSIC LAB
NHS Interactive Visualizations. On this page you can view the interactive visualizations for Universality and diversity in human song (Mehr et al., 2019, Science). If you do not have access to papers in Science, you can view the preprint of this article instead.. Clickone
TONE-DEAFNESS TEST
Do you think you're tone-deaf? Test your pitch perception.WHO'S LISTENING?
Listen to voices from around the world and guess who's listening.WORLD MUSIC QUIZ
Can you tell what kind of song you're listening to? WHAT'S YOUR MUSICAL STYLE? Teach our robot how music feels! He'll guess your favorite songs.THE MUSIC LAB
Visit the Music Lab with your baby! We are now recruiting babies age 2 to 12 months for science research about the world's music. In the study, babies listen to songs while we measure their heart rate, pupil dilation, gaze, motion, and more! We are conveniently located on Harvard's Cambridge campus, with free parking, and you can take home a TEST YOUR MUSICAL IQ Are you a musical prodigy? Find out now.THE MUSIC LAB
This provides a public resource to advance the scientific and humanistic study of music. Music is a signature of the human experience. A ubiquitous, ancient, and uniquely human activity, music, and especially song, appears in most human cultures with staggering diversity. But two fundamental questions — whether there is underlying structureTHE MUSIC LAB
Infants relax in response to unfamiliar foreign lullabies . When we played songs from around the world to infants, we found that infants relax more in response to lullabies compared to other song types in the Natural History of Song (NHS) Discography - dance, healing, and love songs. Below you can explore the songs we used in this study; to learn more about our results, check out our paper inTHE MUSIC LAB
We do citizen science to learn how the human mind creates and perceives music.Pick a game to get started! We recommend wearing headphones but you can also play while listening on speakers. Please feel free to send us feedback about your experience.THE MUSIC LAB
NHS Interactive Visualizations. On this page you can view the interactive visualizations for Universality and diversity in human song (Mehr et al., 2019, Science). If you do not have access to papers in Science, you can view the preprint of this article instead.. Clickone
TONE-DEAFNESS TEST
Do you think you're tone-deaf? Test your pitch perception.WHO'S LISTENING?
Listen to voices from around the world and guess who's listening.WORLD MUSIC QUIZ
Can you tell what kind of song you're listening to? WHAT'S YOUR MUSICAL STYLE? Teach our robot how music feels! He'll guess your favorite songs.THE MUSIC LAB
NHS Discography contains transcriptions and analyses of 118 field recordings from the 30 world regions covered in NHS Ethnography. The songs represent four common social contexts: lullaby, love, dance, and healing. We selected recordings by reviewing published collections of world music, digitizing out-of-print recordings, and contacting anthropologists and ethnomusicologists to obtainTHE MUSIC LAB
We do citizen science to learn how the human mind creates and perceives music.Pick a game to get started! We recommend wearing headphones but you can also play while listening on speakers. Please feel free to send us feedback about your experience.THE MUSIC LAB
Infants relax in response to unfamiliar foreign lullabies . When we played songs from around the world to infants, we found that infants relax more in response to lullabies compared to other song types in the Natural History of Song (NHS) Discography - dance, healing, and love songs. Below you can explore the songs we used in this study; to learn more about our results, check out our paper inTHE MUSIC LAB
Mila is a psychology graduate of Glasgow University, where she worked with social robot facial expressions. After a 15 year-long stint in Luxembourg, Scotland, and Spain, and having survived the British ABRSM classical piano exams, she's returned to her birth city of Boston to research what it is about human evolution and culture that has made us so responsive to organized sound. INTERACTIVE ETHNOGRAPHY PLOT This interactive plot shows descriptions of singing behavior from NHS Ethnography along three dimensions: formality, affect, and religiosity. Each point represents a ethnographic description ofsinging.
SYNTHESIZER GAME
Help us to discover the building blocks of music.KIDS' MUSIC QUIZ!
How do kids interpret world music? This game works best on a desktopcomputer.
THE MUSIC LABTHE MUSIC LAB TESTTHE MUSIC LAB YORBA LINDAMUSIC LAB AT SCHOOLMUSIC LAB FOR KIDS Visit the Music Lab with your baby! We are now recruiting babies age 2 to 12 months for science research about the world's music. In the study, babies listen to songs while we measure their heart rate, pupil dilation, gaze, motion, and more! We are conveniently located on Harvard's Cambridge campus, with free parking, and you can take home a TEST YOUR MUSICAL IQ Are you a musical prodigy? Find out now. THE MUSIC LABTHE MUSIC LAB TESTTHE MUSIC LAB YORBA LINDA This provides a public resource to advance the scientific and humanistic study of music. Music is a signature of the human experience. A ubiquitous, ancient, and uniquely human activity, music, and especially song, appears in most human cultures with staggering diversity. But two fundamental questions — whether there is underlying structure THE MUSIC LABTHE MUSIC LAB TESTTHE MUSIC LAB YORBA LINDA Infants relax in response to unfamiliar foreign lullabies . When we played songs from around the world to infants, we found that infants relax more in response to lullabies compared to other song types in the Natural History of Song (NHS) Discography - dance, healing, and love songs. Below you can explore the songs we used in this study; to learn more about our results, check out our paper inTHE MUSIC LAB
We do citizen science to learn how the human mind creates and perceives music.Pick a game to get started! We recommend wearing headphones but you can also play while listening on speakers. Please feel free to send us feedback about your experience.THE MUSIC LAB
NHS Interactive Visualizations. On this page you can view the interactive visualizations for Universality and diversity in human song (Mehr et al., 2019, Science). If you do not have access to papers in Science, you can view the preprint of this article instead.. Clickone
TONE-DEAFNESS TEST
Do you think you're tone-deaf? Test your pitch perception.WHO'S LISTENING?
Listen to voices from around the world and guess who's listening.WORLD MUSIC QUIZ
Can you tell what kind of song you're listening to? WHAT'S YOUR MUSICAL STYLE? Teach our robot how music feels! He'll guess your favorite songs. THE MUSIC LABTHE MUSIC LAB TESTTHE MUSIC LAB YORBA LINDAMUSIC LAB AT SCHOOLMUSIC LAB FOR KIDS Visit the Music Lab with your baby! We are now recruiting babies age 2 to 12 months for science research about the world's music. In the study, babies listen to songs while we measure their heart rate, pupil dilation, gaze, motion, and more! We are conveniently located on Harvard's Cambridge campus, with free parking, and you can take home a TEST YOUR MUSICAL IQ Are you a musical prodigy? Find out now. THE MUSIC LABTHE MUSIC LAB TESTTHE MUSIC LAB YORBA LINDA This provides a public resource to advance the scientific and humanistic study of music. Music is a signature of the human experience. A ubiquitous, ancient, and uniquely human activity, music, and especially song, appears in most human cultures with staggering diversity. But two fundamental questions — whether there is underlying structure THE MUSIC LABTHE MUSIC LAB TESTTHE MUSIC LAB YORBA LINDA Infants relax in response to unfamiliar foreign lullabies . When we played songs from around the world to infants, we found that infants relax more in response to lullabies compared to other song types in the Natural History of Song (NHS) Discography - dance, healing, and love songs. Below you can explore the songs we used in this study; to learn more about our results, check out our paper inTHE MUSIC LAB
We do citizen science to learn how the human mind creates and perceives music.Pick a game to get started! We recommend wearing headphones but you can also play while listening on speakers. Please feel free to send us feedback about your experience.THE MUSIC LAB
NHS Interactive Visualizations. On this page you can view the interactive visualizations for Universality and diversity in human song (Mehr et al., 2019, Science). If you do not have access to papers in Science, you can view the preprint of this article instead.. Clickone
TONE-DEAFNESS TEST
Do you think you're tone-deaf? Test your pitch perception.WHO'S LISTENING?
Listen to voices from around the world and guess who's listening.WORLD MUSIC QUIZ
Can you tell what kind of song you're listening to? WHAT'S YOUR MUSICAL STYLE? Teach our robot how music feels! He'll guess your favorite songs.THE MUSIC LAB
NHS Discography contains transcriptions and analyses of 118 field recordings from the 30 world regions covered in NHS Ethnography. The songs represent four common social contexts: lullaby, love, dance, and healing. We selected recordings by reviewing published collections of world music, digitizing out-of-print recordings, and contacting anthropologists and ethnomusicologists to obtainTHE MUSIC LAB
We do citizen science to learn how the human mind creates and perceives music.Pick a game to get started! We recommend wearing headphones but you can also play while listening on speakers. Please feel free to send us feedback about your experience.THE MUSIC LAB
Infants relax in response to unfamiliar foreign lullabies . When we played songs from around the world to infants, we found that infants relax more in response to lullabies compared to other song types in the Natural History of Song (NHS) Discography - dance, healing, and love songs. Below you can explore the songs we used in this study; to learn more about our results, check out our paper inTHE MUSIC LAB
Mila is a psychology graduate of Glasgow University, where she worked with social robot facial expressions. After a 15 year-long stint in Luxembourg, Scotland, and Spain, and having survived the British ABRSM classical piano exams, she's returned to her birth city of Boston to research what it is about human evolution and culture that has made us so responsive to organized sound. INTERACTIVE ETHNOGRAPHY PLOT This interactive plot shows descriptions of singing behavior from NHS Ethnography along three dimensions: formality, affect, and religiosity. Each point represents a ethnographic description ofsinging.
SYNTHESIZER GAME
Help us to discover the building blocks of music.KIDS' MUSIC QUIZ!
How do kids interpret world music? This game works best on a desktopcomputer.
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We do CITIZEN SCIENCE to learn how the human mind creates and perceives music. PICK A GAME TO GET STARTED! We recommend wearing headphones but you can also play while listeningon speakers.
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Are You a Super-Listener?Play Only a Super-Listener can tell these tricky sounds apart. Can you? AVERAGE TIME: 5 MINUTES 92,164 players so far!NEW
Test Your Musical IQPlay Are you a musical prodigy? Find out now. AVERAGE TIME: 21 MINUTES 1,921,199 players so far! Kids' Music Quiz!Play How do kids interpret world music? This game works best on a desktopcomputer.
AVERAGE TIME: 8.3 MINUTES 28,672 players so far! Who's Listening?Play Listen to voices from around the world and guess who's listening. AVERAGE TIME: 1.1 MINUTES 72,898 players so far! Tone-Deafness TestPlay Do you think you're tone-deaf? Test your pitch perception. AVERAGE TIME: 2.5 MINUTES 1,190,782 players so far! Top of the ChartsPlay What songs does the whole world know? Help us find out. AVERAGE TIME: 2.2 MINUTES 134,627 players so far!Show More Games
What's Your Musical Style?Play Teach our robot how music feels! He'll guess your favorite songs. AVERAGE TIME: 5.0 MINUTES 157,275 players so far!BETA
Synthesizer GamePlay Help us to discover the building blocks of music. AVERAGE TIME: 4.4 MINUTES 72,329 players so far! World Music QuizPlay Can you tell what kind of song you're listening to? AVERAGE TIME: 2.3 MINUTES 167,515 players so far! VISIT THE MUSIC LAB WITH YOUR BABY! We are now recruiting babies age 2 to 12 months for science research about the world's music. In the study, babies listen to songs while we measure their heart rate, pupil dilation, gaze, motion, and more! We are conveniently located on Harvard's Cambridge campus, with free parking, and you can take home a Music Lab onesie or other cool prizes as a thank-you gift. _PLEASE NOTE THAT WE ARE NOT CURRENTLY RUNNING IN-PERSON STUDIES DUE TO THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC. YOU CAN STILL SIGN UP TO PARTICIPATE IN FUTURE STUDIES WITH YOUR BABY — WE'LL CONTACT YOU WHEN OUR IN-PERSON STUDIES ARE BACK IN OPERATION._ click here to sign up! © 2019-2021 The Music Lab. All rights reserved.LEAVE FEEDBACK
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