The notion of affordance has been introduced by Gibson (1977, 1979) as the feature of an object or the environment that allows the observer to perform an action, a set of «environmental supports for an organism’s intentional activities» (Reybrouk 2005, online publication). Being studied under very different perspectives, this concept has become a crucial issue not only for the ecological psychology but also for cognitive sciences, artificial intelligence studies and philosophy of mind. This variety of approaches has widened the already ambiguous definition originally provided by Gibson, contributing in creating different standpoints in open contrast with each other (see Zipoli Caiani 2011). During the last two decades, moreover, many researchers tried to extend the notion also to musical experience, aiming to draw a coherent theory of musical affordances (e.g. Clarke 2005; Nussbaum 2007; Krueger 2011a; 2011b). In this paper, we will argue for a particular concept of musical affordances, that is, as we see it, narrower and less ambiguous in scope and more closely related to its original. Taking the discovery of canonical neurons as our starting point we will (i) discuss the general notion of affordance, (ii) review some of the most important contributions in this area of research and (iii) propose a motor-based interpretation of musical affordances.

Rethinking Musical Affordances

MENIN, Damiano;
2012

Abstract

The notion of affordance has been introduced by Gibson (1977, 1979) as the feature of an object or the environment that allows the observer to perform an action, a set of «environmental supports for an organism’s intentional activities» (Reybrouk 2005, online publication). Being studied under very different perspectives, this concept has become a crucial issue not only for the ecological psychology but also for cognitive sciences, artificial intelligence studies and philosophy of mind. This variety of approaches has widened the already ambiguous definition originally provided by Gibson, contributing in creating different standpoints in open contrast with each other (see Zipoli Caiani 2011). During the last two decades, moreover, many researchers tried to extend the notion also to musical experience, aiming to draw a coherent theory of musical affordances (e.g. Clarke 2005; Nussbaum 2007; Krueger 2011a; 2011b). In this paper, we will argue for a particular concept of musical affordances, that is, as we see it, narrower and less ambiguous in scope and more closely related to its original. Taking the discovery of canonical neurons as our starting point we will (i) discuss the general notion of affordance, (ii) review some of the most important contributions in this area of research and (iii) propose a motor-based interpretation of musical affordances.
2012
Menin, Damiano; Schiavio, Andrea
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11392/2366914
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