TY - JOUR T1 - Temporal Modulations Reveal Distinct Rhythmic Properties of Speech and Music JF - bioRxiv DO - 10.1101/059683 SP - 059683 AU - Nai Ding AU - Aniruddh D. Patel AU - Lin Chen AU - Henry Butler AU - Cheng Luo AU - David Poeppel Y1 - 2016/01/01 UR - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2016/06/18/059683.abstract N2 - Speech and music have structured rhythms, but these rhythms are rarely compared empirically. This study, based on large corpora, quantitatively characterizes and compares a major acoustic correlate of spoken and musical rhythms, the slow (0.25-32 Hz) temporal modulations in sound intensity. We show that the speech modulation spectrum is highly consistent cross 9 languages (including languages with typologically different rhythmic characteristics, such as English, French, and Mandarin Chinese). A different, but similarly consistent modulation spectrum is observed for Western classical music played by 6 different instruments. Western music, including classical music played by single instruments, symphonic, jazz, and rock music, contains more energy than speech in the low modulation frequency range below 4 Hz. The temporal modulations of speech and music show broad but well-separated peaks around 5 and 2 Hz, respectively. These differences in temporal modulations alone, without any spectral details, can discriminate speech and music with high accuracy. Speech and music therefore show distinct and reliable statistical regularities in their temporal modulations that likely facilitate their perceptual analysis and its neural foundations. ER -