Tone Deafness Not As Common As Many Think
Main Category: Hearing / DeafnessAlso Included In: Neurology / Neuroscience
Article Date: 09 Sep 2007 - 0:00 PDT
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Do people cringe when you sing? You've got company. But researchers have found that only 1 in 20 people truly has amusia, the technical term for tone deafness. Tests have shown that some people with bad singing voices hear music just fine. Amusics are a smaller group with a perceptual problem: They can't pick out differences in pitch or follow the simplest tunes, reports the September 2007 issue of the Harvard Health Letter.
Brain scans haven't revealed major anatomical differences in amusics, but more sophisticated tests have uncovered some subtle variations. In a study comparing amusics to people with normal musical ability, researchers used a brain imaging and statistical technique to measure the density of the white matter (which consists of connecting nerve fibers) between the right frontal lobe, where higher thinking occurs, and the right temporal lobes, where basic processing of sound occurs. The white matter of the amusics was thinner, which suggests a weaker connection. Moreover, the worse the tone deafness, the thinner the white matter.
Some experts believe there's a great deal of overlap between how the brain handles music and how it handles speech, which also has elements of pitch and rhythm. Others, though, believe that musical perception and thinking occur separately from other functions, and that our brains are predisposed toward developing centers and networks dedicated exclusively to music.
Harvard Health Publications
http://www.hsph.harvard.edu
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Visitor Opinions In Chronological Order (1)
Tone Deafness
posted by Evelyn Haskins on 11 Sep 2007 at 2:28 amI was very surprised to read that it is considerded that 1 in 20 people are tone deaf. I an married to a tone deaf man (and rythm blind and colour blind :-( yet he is the only tone deaf person I have known.
Yet he speaks beautifully and has a wonderful speaking voice -- if ONLY he could follow a tune and rythm he would also have a brilliant singing voice. (In fact I fell in love first with his voice :- ) He is also well above average in academic intelligence (BSc )and has held down several well respected scientific and high reponsibility posts before his retirement..
Therefore I would find it VERY hard to believe that tone deafness is positively correlated with speech.
(My son who inherited the tone deafness and rythm blindness developed a reasonable sens of both through intensive training -- similar w.r.t . ryhthm to 'repatterning' of children with cerebral palsey, and music lessons w.r.t . tone.
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