-
Anti-Colonial Strategies in Cross-cultural Music Science Research. Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2023-04-01 Sarah A Sauvé,Elizabeth Phillips,Wyatt Schiefelbein,Hideo Daikoku,Shantala Hegde,Sylvia Moore
THIS PAPER PRESENTS A CRITICAL ANALYSIS OF ethical and methodological issues within cross-cultural music science research, including issues around community based research, participation, and data sovereignty. Although such issues have long been discussed in social science fields including anthropology and ethnomusicology, psychology and music cognition are only beginning to take them into serious
-
The Associations Between Music Training, Musical Working Memory, and Visuospatial Working Memory Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2022-04-01 Sebastian Silas,Daniel Müllensiefen,Rebecca Gelding,Klaus Frieler,Peter M. C. Harrison
Prior research studying the relationship between music training (MT) and more general cognitive faculties, such as visuospatial working memory (VSWM), often fails to include tests of musical memory. This may result in causal pathways between MT and other such variables being misrepresented, potentially explaining certain ambiguous findings in the literature concerning the relationship between MT and
-
Swinging the Score? Swing Phrasing Cannot Be Communicated via Explicit Notation Instructions Alone Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2022-04-01 Christopher Corcoran,Jan Stupacher,Peter Vuust
Jazz musicians usually learn to play with “swing” phrasing by playing by ear. Classical musicians—who play more from musical scores than by ear—are reported to struggle with producing swing. We explored whether classical musicians play with more swing when performing from more detailed swing notation. Thereby we investigated whether a culturally specific improvisational social procedure can be scripted
-
Can the Intended Messages of Mismatched Lexical Tone in Igbo Music Be Understood? A Test for Listeners’ Perception of the Matched Versus Mismatched Compositions Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2022-04-01 Sunday Ofuani
In tone languages, alteration of lexical tone changes the intended meaning. This implies that composers should equally match lexical tone in their music for intelligible communication of the intended textual messages, a compositional approach termed Lexical Tone Determinants (LTD) in this study. Yet, in the Ìgbò language setting, some composers creatively disregard/mismatch lexical tone, which is branded
-
Measuring Children’s Harmonic Knowledge with Implicit and Explicit Tests Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2022-04-01 Kathleen A. Corrigall,Barbara Tillmann,E. Glenn Schellenberg
We used implicit and explicit tasks to measure knowledge of Western harmony in musically trained and untrained Canadian children. Younger children were 6–7 years of age; older children were 10–11. On each trial, participants heard a sequence of five piano chords. The first four chords established a major-key context. The final chord was the standard, expected tonic of the context or one of two deviant
-
Song Imitation in Congenital Amusia Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2022-04-01 Ariadne Loutrari,Cunmei Jiang,Fang Liu
Congenital amusia is a neurogenetic disorder of pitch perception that may also compromise pitch production. Despite amusics’ long documented difficulties with pitch, previous evidence suggests that familiar music may have an implicit facilitative effect on their performance. It remains, however, unknown whether vocal imitation of song in amusia is influenced by melody familiarity and the presence of
-
Violinists Employ More Expressive Gesture and Timing Around Global Musical Resolutions Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2022-02-01 Aditya Chander,Madeline Huberth,Stacey Davis,Samantha Silverstein,Takako Fujioka
Performers express musical structure using variations in dynamics, timbre, timing, and physical gesture. Previous research on instrumental performance of Western classical music has identified increased nontechnical motion (movement considered supplementary to producing sound) and ritardando at cadences. Cadences typically provide resolution to built-up tension at differing levels of importance according
-
The Effect of Subjective Fatigue on Auditory Processing in Musicians and Nonmusicians Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2022-02-01 Saransh Jain,Nuggehalli Puttareviyah Nataraja,Vijaya Kumar Narne
We assessed fatigue's effect on temporal resolution and speech perception in noise abilities in trained instrumental musicians. In a pretest-posttest quasiexperimental research design, trained instrumental musicians (n = 39) and theater artists as nonmusicians (n = 37) participated. Fatigue was measured using a visual analog scale (VAS) under eight fatigue categories. The temporal release of masking
-
Beat Perception and Production in Musicians and Dancers Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2022-02-01 Tram Nguyen,Riya K. Sidhu,J. Celina Everling,Miranda C. Wickett,Aaron Gibbings,Jessica A. Grahn
The ability to perceive and produce a beat is believed to be universal in humans, but individual ability varies. The current study examined four factors that may influence beat perception and production capacity: 1) expertise: music or dance, 2) training style: percussive or nonpercussive, 3) stimulus modality: auditory or visual, and 4) movement type: finger-tap or whole-body bounce. Experiment 1
-
The Idiosyncrasy of Involuntary Musical Imagery Repetition (IMIR) Experiences Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2022-02-01 Taylor A. Liptak,Diana Omigie,Georgia A. Floridou
Involuntary musical imagery repetition (IMIR), colloquially known as “earworms,” is a form of musical imagery that arises involuntarily and repeatedly in the mind. A growing number of studies, based on retrospective reports, suggest that IMIR experiences are associated with certain musical features, such as fast tempo and the presence of lyrics, and with individual differences in music training and
-
The Roles of Absolute Pitch and Timbre in Plink Perception Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2022-02-01 Rebecca N. Faubion-Trejo,James T. Mantell
Listeners can recognize musical excerpts less than one second in duration (plinks). We investigated the roles of timbre and implicit absolute pitch for plink identification, and the time course associated with processing these cues, by measuring listeners’ recognition, response time, and recall of original, mistuned, reversed, and temporally shuffled plinks that were extracted from popular song recordings
-
Reopening the Conversation Between Music Psychology and Music Therapy Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2021-12-01 Emily Carlson,Ian Cross
Although the fields of music psychology and music therapy share many common interests, research collaboration between the two fields is still somewhat rare. Previous work has identified that disciplinary identities and attitudes towards those in other disciplines are challenges to effective interdisciplinary research. The current study explores such attitudes in music therapy and music psychology.
-
Reassessing Syntax-Related ERP Components Using Popular Music Chord Sequences Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2021-12-01 Andrew Goldman,Peter M. C. Harrison,Tyreek Jackson,Marcus T. Pearce
Electroencephalographic responses to unexpected musical events allow researchers to test listeners’ internal models of syntax. One major challenge is dissociating cognitive syntactic violations—based on the abstract identity of a particular musical structure—from unexpected acoustic features. Despite careful controls in past studies, recent work by Bigand, Delbe, Poulin-Carronnat, Leman, and Tillmann
-
Influence of Regular Rhythmic Versus Textural Sound Sequences on Semantic and Conceptual Processing Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2021-12-01 Laure-Hélène Canette,Philippe Lalitte,Barbara Tillmann,Emmanuel Bigand
Conceptual priming studies have shown that listening to musical primes triggers semantic activation. The present study further investigated with a free semantic evocation task, 1) how rhythmic vs. textural structures affect the amount of words evoked after a musical sequence, and 2) whether both features also affect the content of the semantic activation. Rhythmic sequences were composed of various
-
On the Roles of Complexity and Symmetry in Cued Tapping of Well-formed Complex Rhythms Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2021-12-01 Roger T. Dean,David Bulger,Andrew J. Milne
Production of relatively few rhythms with non-isochronous beats has been studied. So we assess reproduction of most well-formed looped rhythms comprising K=2-11 cues (a uniform piano tone, indicating where participants should tap) and N=3-13 isochronous pulses (a uniform cymbal). Each rhythm had two different cue interonset intervals. We expected that many of the rhythms would be difficult to tap,
-
Perception of Musicality and Emotion in Signed Songs Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2021-12-01 Heather Harden Mangelsdorf,Jason Listman,Anabel Maler
This study investigated how signed performances express musical meaning and emotions. Deaf, Hard-of-Hearing (HoH), and hearing participants watched eight translated signed songs and eight signed lyrics with no influence of music. The participants rated these videos on several emotional and movement dimensions. Even though the videos did not have audible sounds, hearing participants perceived the signed
-
Perception of Music and Speech Prosody After Severe Traumatic Brain Injury Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2021-12-01 Laurène Léard-Schneider,Yohana Lévêque
The present study aimed to examine the perception of music and prosody in patients who had undergone a severe traumatic brain injury (TBI). Our second objective was to describe the association between music and prosody impairments in clinical individual presentations. Thirty-six patients who were out of the acute phase underwent a set of music and prosody tests: two subtests of the Montreal Battery
-
The Perceptual Attraction of Pre-Dominant Chords Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2021-09-01 Jenine Brown,Daphne Tan,David John Baker
Among the three primary tonal functions described in modern theory textbooks, the pre-dominant has the highest number of representative chords. We posit that one unifying feature of the pre-dominant function is its attraction to V, and the experiment reported here investigates factors that may contribute to this perception. Participants were junior/senior music majors, freshman music majors, and people
-
The Metaphor of Sweetness in Medieval and Modern Music Listening Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2021-09-01 Jason Stoessel,Kristal Spreadborough,Inés Antón-Méndez
Historical listening has long been a topic of interest for musicologists. Yet, little attention has been given to the systematic study of historical listening practices before the common practice era (c. 1700–present). In the first study of its kind, this research compared a model of medieval perceptions of “sweetness” based on writings of medieval music theorists with modern day listeners’ aesthetic
-
Does Timbre Modulate Visual Perception? Exploring Crossmodal Interactions Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2021-09-01 Zachary Wallmark,Linh Nghiem,Lawrence E. Marks
Musical timbre is often described using terms from non-auditory senses, mainly vision and touch; but it is not clear whether crossmodality in timbre semantics reflects multisensory processing or simply linguistic convention. If multisensory processing is involved in timbre perception, the mechanism governing the interaction remains unknown. To investigate whether timbres commonly perceived as “bright-dark”
-
Effects of Chord Inversion and Bass Patterns on Harmonic Expectancy in Musicians Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2021-09-01 Emily Schwitzgebel,Christopher Wm. White
This study tests the respective roles of pitch-class content and bass patterns within harmonic expectation using a mix of behavioral and computational experiments. In our first two experiments, participants heard a paradigmatic chord progression derived from music theory textbooks and were asked to rate how well different target endings completed that progression. The completion included the progression’s
-
Phenomenological Differences in Music- and Television-Evoked Autobiographical Memories Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2021-06-01 Kelly Jakubowski,Amy M. Belfi,Tuomas Eerola
Music can be a potent cue for autobiographical memories in both everyday and clinical settings. Understanding the extent to which music may have privileged access to aspects of our personal histories requires critical comparisons to other types of memories and exploration of how music-evoked autobiographical memories (MEAMs) vary across individuals. We compared the retrieval characteristics, content
-
Instrument Timbre Enhances Perceptual Segregation in Orchestral Music Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2021-06-01 Manda Fischer,Kit Soden,Etienne Thoret,Marcel Montrey,Stephen McAdams
Timbre perception and auditory grouping principles can provide a theoretical basis for aspects of orchestration. In Experiment 1, 36 excerpts contained two streams and 12 contained one stream as determined by music analysts. Streams—the perceptual connecting of successive events—comprised either single instruments or blended combinations of instruments from the same or different families. Musicians
-
Probe Tone Paradigm Reveals Less Differentiated Tonal Hierarchy in Rock Music Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2021-06-01 Dominique T. Vuvan,Bryn Hughes
Krumhansl and Kessler’s (1982) pioneering experiments on tonal hierarchies in Western music have long been considered the gold standard for researchers interested in the mental representation of musical pitch structure. The current experiment used the probe tone technique to investigate the tonal hierarchy in classical and rock music. As predicted, the observed profiles for these two styles were structurally
-
Establishing the Reliability and Validity of Web-based Singing Research Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2021-04-01 Yi Ting Tan,Isabelle Peretz,Gary E. McPherson,Sarah J. Wilson
In this study, the robustness of an online tool for objectively assessing singing ability was examined by: (1) determining the internal consistency and test-retest reliability of the tool; (2) comparing the task performance of web-based participants (n = 285) with a group (n = 52) completing the tool in a controlled laboratory setting, and then determining the convergent validity between settings,
-
Reproduction Accuracy for Short Rhythms Following Melodic or Monotonic Presentation Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2021-04-01 Andrew V. Frane,Martin M. Monti
Some researchers and study participants have expressed an intuition that novel rhythmic sequences are easier to recall and reproduce if they have a melody, implying that melodicity (the presence of musical pitch variation) fundamentally enhances perception and/or representation of rhythm. But the psychoacoustics literature suggests that pitch variation often impairs perception of temporal information
-
Consonance Preferences Within an Unconventional Tuning System Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2021-02-01 Ronald S. Friedman,Douglas A. Kowalewski,Dominique T. Vuvan,W. Trammell Neill
Recently, Bowling, Purves, and Gill (2018a), found that individuals perceive chords with spectra resembling a harmonic series as more consonant. This is consistent with their vocal similarity hypothesis (VSH), the notion that the experience of consonance is based on an evolved preference for sounds that resemble human vocalizations. To rule out confounding between harmonicity and familiarity, we extended
-
Impact of Music on First Pain and Temporal Summation of Second Pain Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2021-02-01 Mathilde Cabon,Anais Le Fur-Bonnabesse,Steeve Genestet,Bertrand Quinio,Laurent Misery,Alain Woda,Céline Bodéré
Passive music listening has shown its capacity to soothe pain in several clinical and experimental studies. This phenomenon—known as music-induced analgesia—could partly be explained by the modulation of pain signals in response to the stimulation of brain and brainstem centers. We hypothesized that music-induced analgesia may involve inhibitory descending pain systems. We assessed pain-related responses
-
Timbre Vibrato Perception and Description Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2021-02-01 André Almeida,Emery Schubert,Joe Wolfe
In music, vibrato consists of cyclic variations in pitch, loudness, or spectral envelope (hereafter, “timbre vibrato”—TV) or combinations of these. Here, stimuli with TV were compared with those having loudness vibrato (LV). In Experiment 1, participants chose from tones with different vibrato depth to match a reference vibrato tone. When matching to tones with the same vibrato type, 70% of the variance
-
The Need for Composite Models of Music Perception Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2021-02-01 Eline A. Smit,Andrew J. Milne
In the article “Consonance preferences within an unconventional tuning system,” Friedman and colleagues (2021) examine consonance ratings of a large range of dyads and triads from the Bohlen-Pierce chromatic just (BPCJ) scale. The study is designed as a replication of a recent paper by Bowling, Purves, and Gill (2018), which proposes that perception of consonance in dyads, triads, and tetrads can be
-
Affective and Cognitive Responses to Musical Performances of Early 20th Century Classical Solo Piano Compositions Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2021-02-01 Mary C. Broughton,Jessie Dimmick,Roger T. Dean
Effective audience engagement with musical performance involves social, cognitive and affective elements. We investigate the influence of observers’ musical expertise and instrumental motor expertise on their affective and cognitive responses to complex and unfamiliar classical piano performances of works by Scriabin and Hanson presented in audio and audio-visual formats. Observers gave their felt
-
Temporal Perception and Attention in Trained Musicians Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2021-02-01 Jonas Vibell,Ahnate Lim,Scott Sinnett
Considerable evidence converges on the plasticity of attention and the possibility that it can be modulated through regular training. Music training, for instance, has been correlated with modulations of early perceptual and attentional processes. However, the extent to which music training can modulate mechanisms involved in processing information (i.e., perception and attention) is still widely unknown
-
Response to Invited Commentaries on “Consonance Preferences Within an Unconventional Tuning System” Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2021-02-01 Ronald S. Friedman,Douglas A. Kowalewski,Dominique T. Vuvan,W. Trammell Neill
T HE ORIGINS OF TONAL CONSONANCE—THE tendency to perceive some simultaneously sounded combinations of musical tones as more pleasant than others—is arguably among the most fundamental questions in music perception. For more than a century, the issue has been the subject of vigorous debate, undoubtedly fueled by the formidable complexities involved in investigating music-induced affective qualia that
-
Three Questions Concerning Consonance Perception Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2021-02-01 Peter M. C. Harrison
I discuss three fundamental questions underpinning the study of consonance: 1) What features cause a particular chord to be perceived as consonant? 2) How did humans evolve the ability to perceive these features? 3) Why did humans evolve to attribute particular aesthetic valences to these features (if they did at all)? The first question has been addressed by several recent articles, including Friedman
-
Harmonicity and Roughness in the Biology of Tonal Aesthetics. Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2021-02-01 Daniel L Bowling
Evidence supporting a link between harmoni-city and the attractiveness of simultaneous tone combinations has emerged from an experiment designed to mitigate effects of musical enculturation. I examine the analysis undertaken to produce this evidence and clarify its relation to an account of tonal aesthetics based on the biology of auditory-vocal communication.
-
Metrical Restoration From Local and Global Melodic Cues Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2020-11-25 Sarah C. Creel
What factors influence listeners’ perception of meter in a musical piece or a musical style? Many cues are available in the musical “surface,” i.e., the pattern of sounds physically present during listening. Models of meter processing focus on the musical surface. However, percepts of meter and other musical features may also be shaped by reactivation of previously heard music, consistent with exemplar
-
Interpersonal Entrainment in Music Performance Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2020-11-25 Martin Clayton,Kelly Jakubowski,Tuomas Eerola,Peter E. Keller,Antonio Camurri,Gualtiero Volpe,Paolo Alborno
Interpersonal musical entrainment—temporal synchronization and coordination between individuals in musical contexts—is a ubiquitous phenomenon related to music’s social functions of promoting group bonding and cohesion. Mechanisms other than sensorimotor synchronization are rarely discussed, while little is known about cultural variability or about how and why entrainment has social effects. In order
-
Embracing Anti-Racist Practices in the Music Perception and Cognition Community Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2020-11-25 David John Baker,Amy Belfi,Sarah Creel,Jessica Grahn,Erin Hannon,Psyche Loui,Elizabeth Hellmuth Margulis,Adena Schachner,Michael Schutz,Daniel Shanahan,Dominique T. Vuvan
-
Semantic Dimensions of Sound Mass Music Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2020-11-25 Jason Noble,Etienne Thoret,Max Henry,Stephen McAdams
We combine perceptual research and acoustic analysis to probe the messy, pluralistic world of musical semantics, focusing on sound mass music. Composers and scholars describe sound mass with many semantic associations. We designed an experiment to evaluate to what extent these associations are experienced by other listeners. Thirty-eight participants heard 40 excerpts of sound mass music and related
-
The Influence of Rate and Accentuation on Subjective Rhythmization Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2020-09-01 Ève Poudrier
The parsing of undifferentiated tone sequences into groups of qualitatively distinct elements is one of the earliest rhythmic phenomena to have been investigated experimentally (Bolton, 1894). The present study aimed to replicate and extend these findings through online experimentation using a spontaneous grouping paradigm with forced-choice response (from 1 to 12 tones per group). Two types of isochronous
-
Musical Expertise Facilitates Dissonance Detection On Behavioral, Not On Early Sensory Level Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2020-09-01 Tanja Linnavalli,Juha Ojala,Laura Haveri,Vesa Putkinen,Kaisamari Kostilainen,Sirke Seppänen,Mari Tervaniemi
Consonance and dissonance are basic phenomena in the perception of chords that can be discriminated very early in sensory processing. Musical expertise has been shown to facilitate neural processing of various musical stimuli, but it is unclear whether this applies to detecting consonance and dissonance. Our study aimed to determine if sensitivity to increasing levels of dissonance differs between
-
Timing Is Everything…Or Is It? Effects of Instructed Timing Style, Reference, and Pattern on Drum Kit Sound in Groove-Based Performance Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2020-09-01 Guilherme Schmidt Câmara,Kristian Nymoen,Olivier Lartillot,Anne Danielsen
This study reports on an experiment that tested whether drummers systematically manipulated not only onset but also duration and/or intensity of strokes in order to achieve different timing styles. Twenty-two professional drummers performed two patterns (a simple “back-beat” and a complex variation) on a drum kit (hi-hat, snare, kick) in three different timing styles (laid-back, pushed, on-beat), in
-
Across-Channel Auditory Gap Detection Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2020-09-01 Aurora J. Weaver,Matthew Hoch,Lindsey Soles Quinn,Judith T. Blumsack
In studies of perceptual and neural processing differences between musicians and nonmusicians, participants are typically dichotomized on the basis of personal report of musical experience. The present study relates self-reported musical experience and objectively measured musical aptitude to a skill that is important in music perception: temporal resolution (or acuity). The Advanced Measures of Music
-
The Selectivity of Musical Advantage Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2020-06-01 William Choi
The OPERA hypothesis theorizes how musical experience heightens perceptual acuity to lexical tones. One missing element in the hypothesis is whether musical advantage is general to all or specific to some lexical tones. To further extend the hypothesis, this study investigated whether English musicians consistently outperformed English nonmusicians in perceiving a variety of Cantonese tones. In an
-
Classical Rondos and Sonatas as Stylistic Categories Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2020-06-01 Jonathan De Souza,Adam Roy,Andrew Goldman
Sonata and rondo movements are often defined in terms of large-scale form, yet in the classical era, rondos were also identified according to their lively, cheerful character. We hypothesized that sonatas and rondos could be categorized based on stylistic features, and that rondos would involve more acoustic cues for happiness (e.g., higher average pitch height and higher average attack rate). In a
-
Learning Music From Each Other: Synchronization, Turn-taking, or Imitation? Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2020-06-01 Andrea Schiavio,Jan Stupacher,Richard Parncutt,Renee Timmers
In an experimental study, we investigated how well novices can learn from each other in situations of technology-aided musical skill acquisition, comparing joint and solo learning, and learning through imitation, synchronization, and turn-taking. Fifty-four participants became familiar, either solo or in pairs, with three short musical melodies and then individually performed each from memory. Each
-
Comparing Methods for Analyzing Music-Evoked Autobiographical Memories Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2020-06-01 Amy M. Belfi,Elena Bai,Ava Stroud
The study of music-evoked autobiographical memories (MEAMs) has grown substantially in recent years. Prior work has used various methods to compare MEAMs to memories evoked by other cues (e.g., images, words). Here, we sought to identify which methods could distinguish between MEAMs and picture-evoked memories. Participants (N = 18) listened to popular music and viewed pictures of famous persons, and
-
Joint Speech and Its Relation to Joint Action Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2020-03-11 Frank A. Russo
In his article “The Territory Between Speech and Song: A Joint Speech Perspective,” Cummins (2020) argues that research has failed to adequately recognize an important category of vocal activity that falls outside of the domains of language and music, at least as they are typically defined. This category, referred to by Cummins as joint speech, spans a range of vocal activity so broad that it is not
-
Response to Invited Commentaries on The Territory Between Speech and Song Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2020-03-11 Fred Cummins
-
Musicianship Enhances Perception But Not Feeling of Emotion From Others’ Social Interaction Through Speech Prosody Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2020-03-11 Eliot Farmer, Crescent Jicol, Karin Petrini
Music expertise has been shown to enhance emotion recognition from speech prosody. Yet, it is currently unclear whether music training enhances the recognition of emotions through other communicative modalities such as vision and whether it enhances the feeling of such emotions. Musicians and nonmusicians were presented with visual, auditory, and audiovisual clips consisting of the biological motion
-
A Critical Cross-cultural Study of Sensorimotor and Groove Responses to Syncopation Among Ghanaian and American University Students and Staff Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2020-03-11 Maria A. G. Witek, Jingyi Liu, John Kuubertzie, Appiah Poku Yankyera, Senyo Adzei, Peter Vuust
The pleasurable desire to move to a beat is known as groove and is partly explained by rhythmic syncopation. While many contemporary groove-directed genres originated in the African diaspora, groove music psychology has almost exclusively studied European or North American listeners. While cross-cultural approaches can help us understand how different populations respond to music, comparing African
-
Social Music Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2020-03-11 Douglas A. Kowalewski, Taylor M. Kratzer, Ronald S. Friedman
Integrating methods from experimental social psychology and music perception, we tested the hypothesis that when listeners personally like a musician, they will be more inclined to experience his or her music as both provoking movement and as subjectively pleasurable, the two core features of perceived groove. In Experiment 1, participants were exposed to a set of moderately-syncopated, high-groove
-
Sensorimotor Synchronization with Higher Metrical Levels in Music Shortens Perceived Time Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2020-03-11 David Hammerschmidt, Clemens Wöllner
The aim of the present study was to investigate if the perception of time is affected by actively attending to different metrical levels in musical rhythmic patterns. In an experiment with a repeated-measures design, musicians and nonmusicians were presented with musical rhythmic patterns played at three different tempi. They synchronized with multiple metrical levels (half notes, quarter notes, eighth
-
Perceived Tension, Movement, and Pleasantness in Harmonic Musical Intervals and Noises Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2020-03-11 Marco Costa, Mattia Nese
Perceived valence, tension, and movement of harmonic musical intervals (from the unison to the octave presented in a low- and high-register) and standard noises (brown, pink, white, blue, purple) were assessed in two studies that differed in the crossmodal procedure by which tension and movement were rated: proprioceptive device or visual analog scale. Valence was evaluated in both studies with the
-
Joint Speech Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2020-03-11 Jeremy Day-O’Connell
In charting the “territory between speech and song,” Cummins (2020) identifies various forms of vocal behavior involving “multiple people uttering the same thing at the same time”—what the author calls “joint speech.” I interrogate this conceptual framework in light of specific examples both musical and linguistic, which suggest a usefully expanded category: “collaborative vocality.” At the same time
-
The Territory Between Speech and Song Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2020-03-11 Fred Cummins
Speech and song have frequently been treated as contrasting categories. We here observe a variety of collective activities in which multiple participants utter the same thing at the same time, a behavior we call joint speech. This simple empirical definition serves to single out practices of ritual, protest, and the enactment of identity that span the range from speech to song and allows consideration
-
A Computational Cognitive Model for the Analysis and Generation of Voice Leadings Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2020-02-01 Peter M. C. Harrison,Marcus T. Pearce
Voice leading is a common task in Western music composition whose conventions are consistent with fundamental principles of auditory perception. Here we introduce a computational cognitive model of voice leading, intended both for analyzing voice-leading practices within encoded musical corpora and for generating new voice leadings for unseen chord sequences. This model is feature-based, quantifying
-
Exploring the Effects of Effectors Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2020-02-01 Fiona C. Manning, Anna Siminoski, Michael Schutz
We explore the effects of trained musical movements on sensorimotor interactions in order to clarify the interpretation of previously observed expertise differences. Pianists and non-pianists listened to an auditory sequence and identified whether the final event occurred in time with the sequence. In half the trials participants listened without moving, and in half they synchronized keystrokes while
-
The Development of Sensitivity to Tonality Structure of Music Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2020-02-01 Rie Matsunaga, Pitoyo Hartono, Koichi Yokosawa, Jun-ichi Abe
Tonal schemata are shaped by culture-specific music exposure. The acquisition process of tonal schemata has been delineated in Western mono-musical children, but cross-cultural variations have not been explored. We examined how Japanese children acquire tonal schemata in a bi-musical culture characterized by the simultaneous, and unbalanced, appearances of Western (dominant) music along with traditional
-
Steven MacGregor Demorest (1959-2019) Music Perception (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2020-02-01 Steven J. Morrison, Bryan E. Nichols
Steven Demorest, as both a scholar and a singer, had a voice that was strong and resonant. Steve’s passion for singing grew as an undergraduate in the Luther College choirs under the inspiring direction of Weston Noble, as a graduate student at Westminster Choir College, and through his doctoral work at the University of Wisconsin, where he encountered the choral artistry of Robert Fountain. His value