Affiliation:
1. Evolutionary Anthropology Lab, Department of Biological Sciences The University of Tokyo Tokyo Japan
2. Department of Health Sciences of Mind and Body University of Human Arts and Sciences Saitama Japan
3. Department of Molecular Life Science Tokai University School of Medicine Kanagawa Japan
Abstract
AbstractVarious selection pressures have shaped human uniqueness, for instance, music. When and why did musical universality and diversity emerge? Our hypothesis is that “music” initially originated from manipulative calls with limited musical elements. Thereafter, vocalizations became more complex and flexible along with a greater degree of social learning. Finally, constructed musical instruments and the language faculty resulted in diverse and context‐specific music. Music precursors correspond to vocal communication among nonhuman primates, songbirds, and cetaceans. To place this scenario in hominin history, a three‐phase scheme for music evolution is presented herein. We emphasize (1) the evolution of sociality and life history in australopithecines, (2) the evolution of cognitive and learning abilities in early/middle Homo, and (3) cultural evolution, primarily in Homo sapiens. Human musical capacity and products should be due to the hominin‐specific combination of several biosocial features, including bipedalism, stable pair bonding, alloparenting, expanded brain size, and sexual selection.
Funder
Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology