Literature DB >> 1287565

A study of perceptual development for musical tuning.

M P Lynch1, R E Eilers.   

Abstract

Musical tuning perception in infancy and adulthood was explored in three experiments. In Experiment 1, Western adults were tested in detection of randomly located mistunings in a melody based on musical interval patterns from native and nonnative musical scales. Subjects performed better in a Western major scale context than in either a Western augmented or a Javanese pelog scale context. Because the major scale is used frequently in Western music and, therefore, is more perceptually familiar than either the augmented scale or the pelog scale are, the adults' pattern of performance is suggestive of musical acculturation. Experiments 2 and 3 were designed to explore the onset of culturally specific perceptual reorganization for music in the age period that has been found to be important in linguistically specific perceptual reorganization for speech. In Experiment 2, 1-year-olds had a pattern of performance similar to that of the adults, but 6-month-olds could not detect mistunings reliably better than chance. In Experiment 3, another group of 6-month-olds was tested, and a larger degree of mistuning was used so that floor effects might be avoided. These 6-month-olds performed better in the major and augmented scale contexts than in the pelog context, without a reliable performance difference between the major and augmented contexts. Comparison of the results obtained with 6-month-olds and 1-year-olds suggests that culturally specific perceptual reorganization for musical tuning begins to affect perception between these ages, but the 6-month-olds' pattern of results considered alone is not as clear. The 6-month-olds' better performance on the major and augmented interval patterns than on the pelog interval pattern is potentially attributable to either the 6-month-olds' lesser perceptual acculturation than that of the 1-year-olds or perhaps to an innate predisposition for processing of music based on a single fundamental interval, in this case the semitone.

Mesh:

Year:  1992        PMID: 1287565     DOI: 10.3758/bf03211696

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Percept Psychophys        ISSN: 0031-5117


  14 in total

1.  Influences of acculturation and musical sophistication on perception of musical interval patterns.

Authors:  M P Lynch; R E Eilers; K D Oller; R C Urbano; P Wilson
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3.  A comparison of infants' and adults' sensitivity to western musical structure.

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4.  Effects of uncertainty on melodic information processing.

Authors:  A J Cohen; S E Trehub; L A Thorpe
Journal:  Percept Psychophys       Date:  1989-07

5.  Infants' perception of musical relations in short transposed tone sequences.

Authors:  A J Cohen; L A Thorpe; S E Trehub
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6.  Melody recognition: the experimental application of musical rules.

Authors:  L L Cuddy; A J Cohen; J Miller
Journal:  Can J Psychol       Date:  1979-09

7.  Tonal hierarchies in the music of north India.

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8.  Perception of structure in short melodic sequences.

Authors:  L L Cuddy; A J Cohen; D J Mewhort
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9.  Developmental changes in speech discrimination in infants.

Authors:  R E Eilers; W R Wilson; J M Moore
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10.  Development of the perception of musical relations: semitone and diatonic structure.

Authors:  S E Trehub; A J Cohen; L A Thorpe; B A Morrongiello
Journal:  J Exp Psychol Hum Percept Perform       Date:  1986-08       Impact factor: 3.332

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  13 in total

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8.  Perceptual Plasticity for Auditory Object Recognition.

Authors:  Shannon L M Heald; Stephen C Van Hedger; Howard C Nusbaum
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9.  Enhanced music sensitivity in 9-month-old bilingual infants.

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10.  Expectations in culturally unfamiliar music: influences of proximal and distal cues and timbral characteristics.

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Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2013-11-07
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