SSS 2008-06-30(在线收听) |
This is Scientific American's 60-Second Science, I am Steve Mirsky,Got a minute? A team of Finnish and American geneticists has found that that, for some people at least, music is in their genes. In what the researchers called the first study of its kind, they found specific regions of chromosomes that were connected to musical ability. The report appeared in the Journal of Medical Genetics. The subjects were 234 members of several generations of 15 families in Finland. The team used a number of tests to gauge musical skill: one measured pitch, another tested the ability to keep a beat. The chromosomal regions that were found to be connected to music are known to be involved in the migration of neurons during development. And the study also found that the musical DNA overlapped with a region associated with dyslexia. That finding suggests that language and music have a common evolutionary background. Of course you’re going to need more than the right genes to make you a good musician. Because while the N and R trains will take you there, the best way to get to Carnegie Hall remains practice. hanks for the minute for Scientific American's 60-Second Science, and I'm Steve Mirsky.
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原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/lesson/sasss/2008/6/98828.html |