Sounds of Hidden Agents: The Development of Causal Reasoning About Musical Sounds
Minju Kim, Adena Schachner

TL;DR
Children as young as 6 can intuitively reason about how musical sounds are produced, linking them to hidden agents and contexts.
Contribution
Demonstrates that children as young as 6 integrate auditory and visual cues to infer the causes of musical sounds.
Findings
Children aged 6 and adults infer unobserved agents from musical sounds by integrating auditory and visual information.
Younger children (4–5 years) fail to connect sounds with visual contexts, focusing only on auditory features.
By age 6, children use causal reasoning to link sounds with agents and environments, showing developmental change.
Abstract
Listening to music activates representations of movement and social agents. Why? We test whether causal reasoning plays a role, and find that from childhood, people can intuitively reason about how musical sounds were generated, inferring the events and agents that caused the sounds. In Experiment 1 (N = 120, pre‐registered), 6‐year‐old children and adults inferred the presence of an unobserved animate agent from hearing musical sounds, by integrating information from the sounds’ timing with knowledge of the visual context. Thus, children inferred that an agent was present when the sounds would require self‐propelled movement to produce, given the current visual context (e.g., unevenly‐timed notes, from evenly‐spaced xylophone bars). Consistent with Bayesian causal inference, this reasoning was flexible, allowing people to make inferences not only about unobserved agents, but also the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsChild and Animal Learning Development · Language, Metaphor, and Cognition · Neuroscience and Music Perception
