Literature DB >> 7406071

A rigorous test of the proposition that musical intervals have different psychological effects.

T F Maher.   

Abstract

Musical intervals, the elementary tonal relations of music, are thought to have widely disparate psychological effects. However, in previous empirical investigations of this proposition, effects due to musical intervals have been routinely confounded with those due to the frequencies, frequency differences, and mean frequencies of the component tones of the interval. An experimental design that can provide an unconfounded musical-interval effect was employed in the present study, in which ratings for 14 musical intervals formed at two different mean frequencies were collected from 16 subjects. Although the results indicated that certain musical intervals do indeed differ in their psychological effects, 7 of the 14 intervals were never discriminated from one another on any of the 11 rating scales, and the number of pairwise discriminations observed among intervals was considerably less than the maximum number possible. Thus, although the present results provide the first rigorous demonstration that the musical interval factor can affect verbal responding, they provide at the same time only partial support for the popular notion that each musical interval has a unique psychological effect.

Mesh:

Year:  1980        PMID: 7406071

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Psychol        ISSN: 0002-9556


  5 in total

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3.  Melodic interval perception by normal-hearing listeners and cochlear implant users.

Authors:  Xin Luo; Megan E Masterson; Ching-Chih Wu
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4.  Mild Dissonance Preferred Over Consonance in Single Chord Perception.

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Journal:  Iperception       Date:  2016-06-27

5.  Processing of emotional faces in congenital amusia: An emotional music priming event-related potential study.

Authors:  Jin Zhishuai; Liu Hong; Wu Daxing; Zhang Pin; Lu Xuejing
Journal:  Neuroimage Clin       Date:  2017-03-02       Impact factor: 4.881

  5 in total

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