What is a melody? On the relationship between pitch and brightness of timbre

Previous studies showed that the perceptual processing of sound sequences is more efficient when the sounds vary in pitch than when they vary in loudness. We show here that sequences of sounds varying in brightness of timbre are processed with the same efficiency as pitch sequences. The sounds used...

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Main Authors: Marion eCousineau, Samuele eCarcagno, Laurent eDemany, Daniel ePressnitzer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2014-01-01
Series:Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnsys.2013.00127/full
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spelling doaj-1a6d8955607242978c04458dc68e23e42020-11-24T23:47:20ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience1662-51372014-01-01710.3389/fnsys.2013.0012746444What is a melody? On the relationship between pitch and brightness of timbreMarion eCousineau0Samuele eCarcagno1Laurent eDemany2Daniel ePressnitzer3Université de MontréalUniversité de BordeauxUniversité de BordeauxEcole normale supérieurePrevious studies showed that the perceptual processing of sound sequences is more efficient when the sounds vary in pitch than when they vary in loudness. We show here that sequences of sounds varying in brightness of timbre are processed with the same efficiency as pitch sequences. The sounds used consisted of two simultaneous pure tones one octave apart, and the listeners' task was to make same/different judgments on pairs of sequences varying in length (one, two, or four sounds). In one condition, brightness of timbre was varied within the sequences by changing the relative level of the two pure tones. In other conditions, pitch was varied by changing fundamental frequency, or loudness was varied by changing the overall level. In all conditions, only two possible sounds could be used in a given sequence, and these two sounds were equally discriminable. When sequence length increased from one to four, discrimination performance decreased substantially for loudness sequences, but to a smaller extent for brightness sequences and pitch sequences. In the latter two conditions, sequence length had a similar effect on performance. These results suggest that the processes dedicated to pitch and brightness analysis, when probed with a sequence-discrimination task, share unexpected similarities.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnsys.2013.00127/fullSequencesbrightnesstimbremelodies: pitch
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marion eCousineau
Samuele eCarcagno
Laurent eDemany
Daniel ePressnitzer
spellingShingle Marion eCousineau
Samuele eCarcagno
Laurent eDemany
Daniel ePressnitzer
What is a melody? On the relationship between pitch and brightness of timbre
Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience
Sequences
brightness
timbre
melodies
: pitch
author_facet Marion eCousineau
Samuele eCarcagno
Laurent eDemany
Daniel ePressnitzer
author_sort Marion eCousineau
title What is a melody? On the relationship between pitch and brightness of timbre
title_short What is a melody? On the relationship between pitch and brightness of timbre
title_full What is a melody? On the relationship between pitch and brightness of timbre
title_fullStr What is a melody? On the relationship between pitch and brightness of timbre
title_full_unstemmed What is a melody? On the relationship between pitch and brightness of timbre
title_sort what is a melody? on the relationship between pitch and brightness of timbre
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience
issn 1662-5137
publishDate 2014-01-01
description Previous studies showed that the perceptual processing of sound sequences is more efficient when the sounds vary in pitch than when they vary in loudness. We show here that sequences of sounds varying in brightness of timbre are processed with the same efficiency as pitch sequences. The sounds used consisted of two simultaneous pure tones one octave apart, and the listeners' task was to make same/different judgments on pairs of sequences varying in length (one, two, or four sounds). In one condition, brightness of timbre was varied within the sequences by changing the relative level of the two pure tones. In other conditions, pitch was varied by changing fundamental frequency, or loudness was varied by changing the overall level. In all conditions, only two possible sounds could be used in a given sequence, and these two sounds were equally discriminable. When sequence length increased from one to four, discrimination performance decreased substantially for loudness sequences, but to a smaller extent for brightness sequences and pitch sequences. In the latter two conditions, sequence length had a similar effect on performance. These results suggest that the processes dedicated to pitch and brightness analysis, when probed with a sequence-discrimination task, share unexpected similarities.
topic Sequences
brightness
timbre
melodies
: pitch
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnsys.2013.00127/full
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