Pat Savage(@PatrickESavage) 's Twitter Profileg
Pat Savage

@PatrickESavage

Director: @comp_music_sfc
Rutherford Discovery Fellow @AucklandUni
Assoc. Prof. @KeioSFC
PI @Many_Voices_
music, evolution, diversity
he/him

ID:2935593050

linkhttp://CompMusic.info calendar_today19-12-2014 02:40:54

4,6K Tweets

2,5K Followers

1,4K Following

Science Advances(@ScienceAdvances) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Around the world, music tends to have a higher, more stable pitch and slower timing than language does, according to a new analysis. scim.ag/70L

Around the world, music tends to have a higher, more stable pitch and slower timing than language does, according to a new analysis. scim.ag/70L
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Pat Savage(@PatrickESavage) 's Twitter Profile Photo

先週 Nature CommunicationsScience Advances に掲載された地球の音楽と言語の多様性についての論文、日本語の紹介が Forbes に出ました!

元の論文:
1) science.org/doi/10.1126/sc…
2) nature.com/articles/s4146…

forbesjapan.com/articles/detai…
Yuto Ozaki Sam Passmore

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Forbes JAPAN(@forbesjapan) 's Twitter Profile Photo

慶應義塾大学SFC研究所の尾﨑雄人上席所員と環境情報学部のパトリック・サベジ准教授は、大規模な国際研究チームと協力して、世界各地の50カ国以上の音楽と言語の録音を分析した

→「音楽」は人間社会で独自の進化を遂げる、言語との複雑な関係関係
forbesjapan.com/articles/detai…

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Chris Stringer(@ChrisStringer65) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Why Do We Sing? New Analysis of Folk Songs Finds Similarities around the World. Across the globe, singing traditions are vast and varied. Their commonalities may help explain how music evolved Scientific American scientificamerican.com/article/why-do…

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Chris Stringer(@ChrisStringer65) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Globally, songs and instrumental melodies are slower and higher and use more stable pitches than speech science.org/doi/10.1126/sc…

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Prof. Constantina Theofanopoulou(@Constantinatheo) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Amazing work! 'Relative to speech, songs use (i) higher pitch, (ii) slower temporal rate, and (iii) more stable pitches, while both songs and speech used similar (iv) pitch interval size and (v) timbral brightness.'

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Oleg Sobchuk 🇺🇦(@oleg_sobchuk) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Our new paper w/ Mason Youngblood & Olivier Morin. Are early members of music genres more popular than musicians joining these genres later on? Or: Is there first-mover advantage in music? We put this question to the test using ~1 mil songs from Spotify🧵/1
epjdatascience.springeropen.com/articles/10.11…

Our new paper w/ @MasYoungblood & @OliverWithAnI. Are early members of music genres more popular than musicians joining these genres later on? Or: Is there first-mover advantage in music? We put this question to the test using ~1 mil songs from Spotify🧵/1 epjdatascience.springeropen.com/articles/10.11…
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Pat Savage(@PatrickESavage) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Really enjoyed my kōrero with Dale Husband Waatea about our collaborative kaupapa (with Yuto Ozaki, Suzanne Purdy and 72 others) on global relationships between song and speech. Tēnā koe, Dale!
waateanews.com/2024/05/17/pat…

(For more details, see nytimes.com/2024/05/15/sci…)

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QMUL Sci & Eng News(@QMULSciEng) 's Twitter Profile Photo

A global study (75 researchers, 46 countries!) finds predictable melodies in songs may help us bond & synchronise as a group. Dr Emmanouil Benetos (@QMEECS) contributed his expertise in analysing the music, revealing deep connections between music & language. scientificamerican.com/article/why-do…

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Diana Christine(@drdianencefalon) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Great to chat a bit with Scientific American about this amazing study spearheaded by Yuto Ozaki and Pat Savage, and especially represent Cherokee Nation language thanks to consultation with Sammy Still Chief Chuck Hoskin, Jr. 🙏🏼

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Sam Passmore(@SamPassmore_) 's Twitter Profile Photo

My new paper Nature Communications tells us that musical style holds a historical signal.

We show that in five dimensions of musical style, there is geographic autocorrelation and treelike structure similar to level that we see in models of language evolution.

nature.com/articles/s4146…

My new paper @NatureComms tells us that musical style holds a historical signal. We show that in five dimensions of musical style, there is geographic autocorrelation and treelike structure similar to level that we see in models of language evolution. nature.com/articles/s4146…
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Scientific American(@sciam) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Across the globe, singing traditions are vast and varied. Their commonalities may help explain how music evolved trib.al/UV1K52X

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千葉楽斗(@gakuto_chiba) 's Twitter Profile Photo

2024.5.15(現地時間)
尾﨑雄人さん(Yuto Ozaki)率いる私たちの研究論文が学術誌「Science Advances」に掲載されました!音楽と言語におけるグローバルな類似点と相違点を探求しています

gakuto-chiba.com/post/scieadva1

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Durham Cultural Evolution Research Centre(@Durham_DCERC) 's Twitter Profile Photo

5 days left until early bird registration for closes at 4pm UTC/GMT on Monday 20th May.
pay.durham.ac.uk/event-durham/c… Cultural Evolution Society
We are very happy to announce our preliminary programme as well!! ces2024.webspace.durham.ac.uk/2024/05/15/pre…

5 days left until early bird registration for closes at 4pm UTC/GMT on Monday 20th May. #CES2024Durham pay.durham.ac.uk/event-durham/c… @CulturalEvolSoc We are very happy to announce our preliminary programme as well!! ces2024.webspace.durham.ac.uk/2024/05/15/pre…
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MaxPlanck-Psycholinguistics(@MPI_NL) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Globally, songs and instrumental melodies are slower, higher, and use more stable pitches than speech: A Registered Report. New paper by Yuto Ozaki & al. -@AndreaRavignani , Yannick Jadoul, Dr. Limor Raviv 🦄🤗🐘🦒 -
doi.org/10.1126/sciadv…

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Emmanouil Benetos(@emmanouilb) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Proud to be part of a 75-author collaboration on cross-cultural similarities between music and speech led by Pat Savage and Yuto Ozaki! The paper is featured in the cover of Science Advances and can be found at: science.org/doi/10.1126/sc…

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