What do other animals think of human music?

What do other animals think of human music?

Use code howtown at the link below to get an exclusive 60% off an annual Incogni plan: https://incogni.com/howtown Source list: https://docs.google.com/document/d/10... To support independent science journalism and get bonus content ... JOIN OUR PATREON:   / howtown   Here are some of the wonderful people on who support this channel through our Patreon Town Council: Bev Fong Sean Barrett Jon Hewett Albychen Aatish Bhatia avaren Evan Hass Mark Tinker L.A. O’Connor Marcos Huerta Joaquim Salles Sam Gaty Edgar Sutawika Tim Davey Navneet Pedro ZM Martin Weeks Dimi Bryce Golden-Chen Estelle Caswell Gregory Laborde Yash Murthy Matthew Stvartak Garret Wates Slightly Suspicious Mind Kellyn Lorentzen-Goler omg.science Duncan Stannett Keith England Jocelyn Tabancay Duffy Casey Schatz Mark McCreary Jonathan McCabe Branden Ushjima Esh Tatla Wookiee Henderson Byung-Cheol Cho Frances Haugen Gilbo Jiménez Roy Lara Kai Tze Melanie Halley Archie Stonehill Ed Martini Jose Zaragoza Jr Jamieson Urquhart Nate Hingst Jay McZara Scott Heimendinger Thin Air Do animals actually like music — or are humans just projecting? In this episode of Howtown, we investigate the science of animals and music through experiments with cotton-top tamarins, orangutans, rats, mice, parrots, dogs, cats, and a wild fox who seemed captivated by a banjo. We look at what animal behavior research, neuroscience, and music cognition can tell us about rhythm, pitch, melody, consonance, dissonance, emotion, reward, pattern recognition, and why human brains find music so powerful. Along the way, we explore studies on cotton-top tamarins preferring silence to human music, orangutans choosing silence over different music genres, rats conditioned to prefer Miles Davis, mice exposed to Beethoven during development, dogs howling along to favorite songs, and Snowball the cockatoo dancing to the beat. Featuring conversations with researchers and musicians including Aniruddh Patel, Pralle Kriengwatana, David Teie, Suzanne MacDonald, and Andy Thorn, this episode asks: can animals hear music the way we do? Can they recognize rhythm or melody? Do they feel emotion from music? And what does animal music research reveal about the evolution of music in humans? 00:00 the song 00:56 the fox 02:09 what’s music? 02:56 pitch = rhythm 05:57 incogni 07:00 tamarins & taste 08:35 orangutans & opera 10:22 other species 11:11 rats & reward 12:38 parrots & patterns 13:46 complex vocal learning 15:55 shallow howl 17:24 melody 18:41 consonance v dissonance 20:09 mice & memory 22:27 more than a feeling 23:39 the cellist 25:46 composing the song 28:41 the monkeys listen 30:26 good anthropomorphizing?