The biology of musicality

Authors
Publication date 09-03-2026
Journal Current Biology
Volume | Issue number 36 | 5
Pages (from-to) R177-R180
Number of pages 4
Organisations
  • Interfacultary Research - Institute for Logic, Language and Computation (ILLC)
Abstract
Recent interdisciplinary advances have transformed the study of the evolution of music. Rather than treating music as a cultural artifact, current research targets musicality—the biological capacity enabling humans to perceive, produce, and enjoy structured sound. Evidence from infants, cross-cultural studies, and neuroscience shows that humans possess innate predispositions for rhythm, pitch, and temporal expectation that arise independently of training. Comparative studies reveal that components of musicality have distinct evolutionary histories: primate research supports gradual development of rhythmic and audiomotor integration, while convergent traits in vocal-learning species highlight shared biological constraints. Neuropsychological and developmental findings further show that musicality is not reducible to language, drawing instead on perceptual, motor, and affective systems that likely predate speech. Collectively, these insights establish musicality as a fundamental cognitive capacity and provide a robust framework for investigating how its components evolved, how they function across species, and why music is central to human life.
Document type Article
Language English
Related publication Musical Animals: Are we? Can there be?
Published at https://doi.org/10.31234/osf.io/j8x4w_v3 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2026.01.068
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