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音乐品味究竟从何而来

来源:可可英语 编辑:Jenny   可可英语APP下载 |  可可官方微信:ikekenet

Have you been getting in formation with Beyoncé lately?

你最近听碧昂丝的新歌了吗?
Or maybe you're more of a Deadhead and think the '70s were the peak of music?
又或者你是"感恩而死"乐队的粉丝 认为70年代是音乐的巅峰时期?
A lot of debates about a so-called golden age of music come down to personal taste.
很多关于所谓的音乐黄金年代的讨论都归结到个人的音乐品味上
But can science help explain where your music taste comes from?
但是科学能帮助我们解释音乐品味究竟是从哪里来的吗?
According to some psychology research, it's probably linked to your memories of different songs,
根据一些心理研究 音乐品味与你关于不同的歌曲记忆有关
so there's not just one era of timeless tunes.
所以没有一个时代的音乐是永远不过时的
Developmental psychologists have noticed that the memories you form as a young adult tend to stay more detailed,
发展心理学家们发现成年早期形成的记忆 会更加清楚
even as you get older.
即使在你变老的过程中
So, in the late 1990s, some researchers wanted to see if this pattern was /also/ true for memories of music,
所以 在20世纪90年代末 一些研究者想要弄清楚这个模式是否 适用于对于音乐的记忆
and if that affected people's music tastes.
并且是否影响着人们的音乐品味
To do that, they collected a library of songs, with one that was popular in each year from 1935 to 1994.
为了做这个实验 他们收集了大量的歌曲 这些歌曲来自于 1935年到1994年每年的流行曲目
Then, they rounded up some elderly people and college students, played them 20 seconds of each song,
接下来 他们测试了一些老年人和大学生 给他们播放每首歌的前20秒
and asked if they had heard it before, if they had any memories related to it, and whether they liked it.
然后询问他们以前是否听过 是否有任何关于 这首歌的记忆 还有他们是否喜欢这首歌
The older group liked the songs that were popular when they were --teenagers best, while M.C. Hammer wasn't exactly their cup of tea.
老年组喜欢的歌曲是在他们青少年时期流行的 但是 M.C. Hammer并不是他们的菜
That's basically what the psychologists expected.
这基本上正是心理学家所预测的结果
But the younger group was kind of surprising.
但是青年组的测试结果就有一点令人惊讶了
They liked the songs from their teenage years best,
他们最喜欢自己青少年时期的歌

音乐品味究竟从何而来

but they /also/ recognized and liked popular songs from the late 1960s – before they were even born.

但是同时他们也能辨认出并喜欢 来自20世纪60年代末流行的歌曲-在他们还没有出生以前
At the time, the researchers argued that the late 1960s was the golden age of music,
那时 研究者们认为20世纪60年代是音乐的黄金年代 因为
since even the kids with their newfangled grunge were still listening to those songs.
甚至喜欢最新的邋遢音乐的孩子也在听这些歌曲
Case closed, right? Well… not exactly.
到这里这个研究就结束了 是吗?但是……并不完全是
Good science means trying to replicate results.
良好的科学意味着尝试去复制结果
So if that /was/ the golden age, other psychologists would see it if they ran the study again.
所以如果20世纪60年代就是音乐的黄金时期的话 研究者再做一次研究 其他心理学家将会明白。
A decade later, some researchers did just that,
十年后 一些研究者又做了一次实验
using audio clips from the top two singles from the 1955 to 2009 year-end Billboard charts.
用的是1995年到2006年底美国Billboard榜单 上前两名单曲的音频片段
They only tested college students, and found a similar pattern.
他们只测试了大学生 并发现了相似的模式
Only this time, the golden age seemed to be in the /early 1980s/, not the late 1960s.
只有这一次 黄金年代似乎是在20世纪80年代初 而不是20世纪60年代末。
These psychologists drew a different conclusion, because they /also/ asked how old the students' parents were.
这些心理学家得出了截然不同的结论 因为他们也询问了 学生父母的年龄
And the golden age songs were from when their parents would've been teenagers.
黄金年代歌曲来自于他们父母曾是青少年时期的歌
Somehow the parents were passing their music tastes onto their kids,
父母也在以某种方式给他们的孩子传递音乐品味
but it's not like there's a "funk" gene or a "new wave" gene that you can inherit.
但这并不是 一种可以继承的音乐类型 例如乡土爵士乐或是新浪潮音乐
Instead, it is probably an example of the mere exposure effect:
相反地 这大概是曝光效应的一个例子:
Basically, people report liking a thing more when they've seen or heard it before –
通常情况下 人们会更喜欢一个他们以前已经看到过或听到过的东西-
whether it's a song, or even just random shapes.
无论 它是一首歌 或只是任意的形状
And it's especially true when they're not paying close attention to the thing at first,
尤其是当他们一开始并不是很关注这件事的时候
like if parents played their favorite songs around their young children.
像是父母在他们的孩子面前播放自己喜欢的歌
So there probably never was – or ever will be – one golden age of music, but there's likely a golden age /for you/.
所以可能从来都没有-或者将会有-一个音乐的黄金时代 但是一定有 一个只属于你的音乐的黄金时代
Thanks for asking, and thanks especially to all of our patrons on Patreon who keep these answers coming.
谢谢大家的提问 特别是在Patreon上所有关注这些回答的我们的粉丝朋友们
If you'd like to submit questions to be answered, or get some videos a few days early, go to patreon.com/scishow.
如果你也想要提交问题 得到我们的回答 或是看几天前的视频 请点击patreon.com/scishow.
And don't forget to go to youtube.com/scishow and subscribe!
同时不要忘记去youtube上订阅我们的节目哟!

重点单词   查看全部解释    
related [ri'leitid]

想一想再看

adj. 相关的,有亲属关系的

 
tend [tend]

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v. 趋向,易于,照料,护理

 
formation [fɔ:'meiʃən]

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n. 构造,编队,形成,队形,[地]地层

联想记忆
conclusion [kən'klu:ʒən]

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n. 结论

 
decade ['dekeid]

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n. 十年

联想记忆
affected [ə'fektid]

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adj. 受影响的,受感动的,受疾病侵袭的 adj. 做

联想记忆
hammer ['hæmə]

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n. 锤,榔头
vi. 锤击,反复敲打

 
replicate ['replikeit]

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v. 折叠,复制,模写 n. 同样的样品 adj. 转折

联想记忆
random ['rændəm]

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adj. 随机的,随意的,任意的
adv. 随

 
inherit [in'herit]

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v. 继承,遗传

 

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