If, someone plunks a random piano key, a tiny minority of people can
identify the note based on its sound alone. These people boast perfect
pitch, the ability to recognize individual sound frequencies without any
external reference. But even these gifted few are not truly perfect. A
new study shows that their errors, though subtle, provide a previously
unseen glimpse into how biological and environmental factors together
shape hearing.



Absolute pitch, commonly known as perfect pitch, results from the
confluence of early musical training a rare genetic endowment. Yet the
neurology underlying absolute pitch (and its converse, congenital
tune-deafness, or amusia) remains obscure. In the new study, researchers
identified about 1,000 people who could instantly and effortlessly label
each of a series of randomly presented acoustical tones. Results
revealed that people with absolute pitch formed a distinct clump of
scores, far outside the normal range of ability. "There are people
who have this exquisitely perfect pitch-naming ability, and the rest of
us are just guessing," say's the study's lead author,
geneticist Jane Gitschier
<http://www.hhmi.org/research/investigators/gitschier_bio.html>   of the
University of California <http://www.ucsf.edu>  , San Francisco. That
fact, combined with previous family habitability studies, suggests that,
unlike most complex traits, perfect pitch may be governed by only one
gene or at most very few.



The study also exposed an Anhilles' heel for people with absolute
pitch: the notes surrounding A. Volunteers with perfect pitch were far
more likely to mistake a G-sharp for an A than to make any other error.
They also perceived A-sharp frequently as A. The researchers suggest
that this pattern may reflect the use of the note A as universal tuning
frequency in bands and orchestras. As a result of this disproportionate
exposure, the group hypothesizes, the note may act as a "perceptual
magnet," fooling the mind into lumping nearby tones into the A
category.



In its ongoing research, Gitschier's group is trying to isolate a
gene that governs absolute pitch, with the goal of then probing its
molecular machinery. Ultimately, Gitschier says, she hopes to use
absolute pitch as a platform for better understanding how the brain
changes as a result of experience-a phenomenon known as neuroplasticity.
The new findings, according to Dennis Drayna, a geneticist at the
National Institute on Deafnes and Other Communication Disorders who
studies pitch perception, "open the door to a powerful and precise
measure of learning and neuroplasticity within the auditory system. You
can look at this only in people who have absolute pitch because those
are the only people for whom this learning effect is going to be stable
and measurable."


Happy Learning,



Yovan P. Putra <http://primamind.blogspot.com>

www.primastudy.com <http://www.primastudy.com/>



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