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引用次数: 0

摘要

早在互联网为我们提供网络化的数字系统之前,音乐交流就已经创造了一个全球网络化的模拟系统,由录音、无线电广播和现场表演组成。让一些音频形式获得病毒式传播,而另一些则失败的功能,属于三个领域的交叉点:访问、文化和认知。我们知道嘻哈唱片业的爆炸式增长如何解决了访问问题,以及嘻哈歌词如何满足文化需求。但为什么嘻哈会让你屁股发抖?这篇文章提出,嘻哈艺术家正在创造一种脑对脑连接的创新。也就是说,在边缘系统的深层部分,在嘻哈音乐促进的神经和社会通路的组合中,以前没有连接到语言中心。这项研究并不是在论证使用计算神经科学来分析嘻哈音乐。相反,它问的是嘻哈艺术家作为街头版的计算神经科学家取得了什么成就;以及他们如何策略性地运用黑人音乐传统,重新连接世界的全球节奏神经系统,以适应新的认知、文化和政治联盟和情感。
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Hip Hop as Computational Neuroscience
Long before the internet provided us with a networked digital system, music exchanges had created a global networked analog system, built of recordings, radio broadcasts, and live performance. The features that allowed some audio formations to go viral, while others failed, fall at the intersection of three domains: access, culture, and cognition. We know how the explosive growth of the hip hop recording industry addressed the access problem, and how hip hop lyrics addressed cultural needs. But why does hip hop make your ass shake? This essay proposes that hip hop artists were creating an innovation in brain-to-brain connectivity. That is to say, there are deep parts of the limbic system that had not previously been connected to linguistic centers in the combination of neural and social pathways that hip hop facilitated. This research is not an argument for using computational neuroscience to analyze hip hop. Rather, it is asking what hip hop artists accomplished as the street version of computational neuroscientists; and, how they strategically deployed Black music traditions to rewire the world’s global rhythmic nervous system for new cognitive, cultural, and political alignments and sensibilities.
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