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Article
Music Training and Vocal Production of Speech and Song
Music Perception: An Interdisciplinary Journal (2008)
  • Elizabeth L. Stegemoller, Northwestern University
  • Erika Skoe, Northwestern University
  • Trent Nicol, Northwestern University
  • Catherine M. Warrier, Northwestern University
  • Nina Kraus, Northwestern University
Abstract

Studying similarities and differences between speech and song provides an opportunity to examine music’s role in human culture.Forty participants divided into groups of musicians and nonmusicians spoke and sang lyrics to two familiar songs.The spectral structures of speech and song were analyzed using a sta- tistical analysis of frequency ratios.Results showed that speech and song have similar spectral structures,with song having more energy present at frequency ratios corresponding to those ratios associated with the 12-tone scale. This difference may be attributed to greater fun- damental frequency variability in speech,and was not affected by musical experience.Higher levels of musical experience were associated with decreased energy at frequency ratios not corresponding to the 12-tone scale in both speech and song.Thus,musicians may invoke multisensory (auditory/vocal-motor) mecha- nisms to fine-tune their vocal production to more closely align their speaking and singing voices accord- ing to their vast music listening experience.

Disciplines
Publication Date
June, 2008
Publisher Statement
This article is from Music Perception: An Interdisciplinary Journal 25 (2008): 419-428, doi:10.1525/mp.2008.25.5.419. Posted with permission.
Citation Information
Elizabeth L. Stegemoller, Erika Skoe, Trent Nicol, Catherine M. Warrier, et al.. "Music Training and Vocal Production of Speech and Song" Music Perception: An Interdisciplinary Journal Vol. 25 Iss. 5 (2008)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/elizabeth_stegemoller/1/